Part 13 (1/2)

”I was on duty in the castle dining room last night,” said Jenkins. ”Miss Penelope Gates had dinner on her own. She ordered a bottle of champagne and drank the lot. Then she saw that writer, Miss Martyn-Broyd, come in. I gather from gossip that there was apparently some s.e.x scene and Miss Martyn-Broyd and Mr. Jessop, the minister, had been rea.s.sured it was not so. Miss Gates told Miss Martyn-Broyd that she had been tricked, that there was in fact a s.e.x scene, and she called her books dreary. Miss Martyn-Broyd was distressed and weeping. To my way of thinking,” said Jenkins pompously, ”her mind was so overset that she probably murdered Miss Gates.”

”If that's all ye've got to say,” said Blair, looking at him with dislike, ”ye can go.”

Jenkins departed in a huff.

”Has that writer woman arrived yet?” demanded Blair.

”Yes,” said Hamish.

Blair glared at him for a moment, as if debating whether to tell him that he should not be in the interviewing room, but then said, ”Fetch her in.”

Jimmy Anderson went out. Hamish stayed where he was.

Patricia came in. She was quite white, but now composed.

Blair started the questioning in his usual unsubtle way.

”Where were you today?”

”At what time, Officer?”

”Chief Inspector. We'll start with when you got up.”

”I made breakfast and wrote another few pages of my new book. Then I went out for a drive.”

”Where?”

”I was distressed over what the television people were doing with my book. I know Miss Gates is dead and de mortuis de mortuis and all that, but she was a horrible, vicious and vulgar woman. She sneered at me in the Tommel Castle Hotel the evening before and told me that what I had been a.s.sured was not going to be a p.o.r.nographic scene was in fact going to be just that. She said they had tricked me into believing it otherwise. I was very, very upset. I could not write properly. So I drove and drove mindlessly. I had planned to drive to Drim and confront them, but I had no courage left. I do not know where I drove or for how long, but I suddenly realised I was hungry. I found myself in Golspie and went to the Sutherland Arms Hotel for a bar lunch. Then I returned home.” and all that, but she was a horrible, vicious and vulgar woman. She sneered at me in the Tommel Castle Hotel the evening before and told me that what I had been a.s.sured was not going to be a p.o.r.nographic scene was in fact going to be just that. She said they had tricked me into believing it otherwise. I was very, very upset. I could not write properly. So I drove and drove mindlessly. I had planned to drive to Drim and confront them, but I had no courage left. I do not know where I drove or for how long, but I suddenly realised I was hungry. I found myself in Golspie and went to the Sutherland Arms Hotel for a bar lunch. Then I returned home.”

”We'll check with the Sutherland Arms Hotel. What is the make and registration number of your car?”

Patricia gave it to him.

”The way I see it,” said Blair with a fat smile, ”is that you, more than anyone else, had a good reason to want Penelope Gates dead. She had jeered at you about how you had been tricked, and you admit your mind was overset. So you went to Drim and you climbed up that mountain. You heard Penelope being instructed to stand on that rock. You scrambled around in the mist until you were underneath and then you grabbed her ankle and pulled her over.”

”That is ridiculous,” said Patricia coolly. ”May I point out that it is now after midnight and I am very tired.”

Blair struck the desk. ”We're all b.l.o.o.d.y tired, woman! But you will stay here until ah'm finished with you.” His Glasgow accent, which he usually modified when speaking to the 'toffs' such as Jenkins and Patricia, suddenly thickened.

Sheila sat in the hall with the others and waited. She was feeling hard done by. It had transpired that the company lawyers had been present when all the others had been interviewed, but to her complaint Harry had given a ma.s.sive shrug and said the lawyers needed their sleep.

For the first time, Sheila began to wonder who had really murdered Penelope. It was no longer an intellectual exercise. One of them in this castle, probably one of them around the fire, had murdered Penelope. No one was mourning her; no one had a good word to say for her.

Hamish Macbeth awoke the next morning as the alarm shrilled. He felt very tired. He had had about four hours' sleep.

He ran over in his mind the events of the night before. Fiona said she had been nowhere near Penelope, but there was no proof of that. Gervase had no firm alibi. With the mist so thick, anyone could have been anywhere.

He wondered if the BBC would go for a new actress and changed script or if the whole thing would just fall through.

He rose and washed and dressed. He then went into the kitchen to prepare himself some breakfast. Rain drummed steadily down outside, the first rain for many days.

There was a tentative knock at the door. He sighed. Probably some local looking for gossip. But when he opened the door, it was to find Patricia Martyn-Broyd.

”I must speak to you, Hamish,” she said. There were black circles under her eyes, pandalike against the parchment of her old skin.

”Come in,” he said. ”I was just preparing breakfast. Can I be getting you something?”

”I couldn't eat a thing,” said Patricia.

”Sit yourself down anyway and have a coffee.”

Patricia waited while Hamish prepared two cups of coffee and then sat down at the kitchen table opposite her.

”I am in bad trouble,” said Patricia.

”Why? What's happened?”

She looked at him impatiently. ”I am suspected of murdering that creature.”

”That's Blair's way. He goes on as if he suspects everyone.”

”But don't you see! I am the one with the strongest motive.”

”I don't know about that. She had threatened to get Fiona King, Gervase Hart and Sheila Burford fired. And they were all up on the mountain with her. Also, Harry Frame let slip last night that there had been some change of mind at BBC Scotland and they wanted more of a traditional detective series, in which case Penelope and her beautiful body would not have been needed all that much. But then, I hardly think Harry Frame would shove her over a cliff to get rid of her. If you have not murdered Penelope Gates, then you have nothing to worry about.”

”I am not stupid!” said Patricia. ”I came here to get your help and to get away from the press. I have no alibi, and that man Blair, under pressure from the media, is determined to make an arrest, any arrest. I want you, Hamish Macbeth, to find out who really murdered Penelope.”

”Why me?”

”I formed the opinion that you are not lacking in intelligence. From the church gossip at Cnothan, I discovered that you had solved crimes before, and all on your own initiative.”

”I will do my best, of course, to find out who did it,” said Hamish cautiously. ”But I do not have the resources of Strath-bane.”

”Nonetheless, I am relying on you. I am not a poor woman. I can pay you.”

”That's not necessary. May I suggest if you don't want any breakfast that you go home and get some sleep?”

”I can't with all those press around.”

”As you have pointed out, you're not a poor woman. Take a room at the hotel. They'll have the keepers posted at the gates to keep the press out.”

”I shall do that. Will you keep me informed of any developments?”

”I'll tell you what I can, but I would suggest you try to remember where you were driving. Someone might have seen you.”

When she left, he fried himself some bacon and eggs. He did not have any newspaper delivered, usually buying one at Patel's. The tabloids would be having a field day publis.h.i.+ng naked pictures of Penelope. It was as well that husband of hers was dead.