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'This is voice activated,' I said. 'Greville left it switched on one day when he went to lunch, and this is what he found on the tape when he returned.' I pressed the switch and the voice that was familiar to both of us spoke revealing forth: 'I'm in his office now and I can't find them. He hides everything, he's security mad, you know that. I can't ask. He'd never tell me, and I don't think he trusts me. Po-faced Annette doesn't sneeze unless he tells her to . . .'
Jason's voice, full of the c.o.c.ky street-smart aggression that went with the orange spiky hair, clicked off eventually into silence. Prospero Jenks worked some saliva into his mouth and carefully made sure the recorder was not still alive and listening.
'Jason wasn't talking to me,' he said unconvincingly.
'He was talking to someone else.'
'Jason was the regular messenger between you and Greville,' I said. 'I sent him round here myself last week.
Jason wouldn't take much seducing to bring you information along with the merchandise. But Greville found out. It compounded his sense of betrayal. So when you and he were talking in the Orwell at Ipswich, what was his opinion of Jason?'
He made a gesture of half-suppressed fury.
'I don't know how you know all this,' he said.
It had taken nine days and a lot of searching and a good deal of guessing at possibilities and probabilities, but the pattern was now a reliable path through at least part of the maze, and no other interpretation that I could think of explained the facts.
I said again, 'What did he say about Jason?'
Prospero Jenks capitulated. 'He said he'd have to leave Saxony Franklin. He said it was a condition of us ever doing business again. He said I was to tell Jason not to turn up for work on the Monday.'
'But you didn't do that,' I said.
'Well, no.'
'Because when Greville died, you decided to try to steat not only five stones but the lot.'
The blue eyes almost smiled. 'Seemed logical, didn't it?' he said. 'Grey wouldn't know. The insurance would pay. No one would lose.'
Except the underwriters, I thought. But I said, 'The diamonds weren't insured. Are not now insured. You were stealing them directly from Greville.'
He was almost astounded, but not quite.
'Greville told you that, didn't he?' I guessed.
Again the little-boy shame. 'Well, yes, he did.'
'In the Orwell?'
'Yes.'
'Pross,' I said, 'did you ever grow up?'
'You don't know what growing up is. Growing up is being ahead of the game.'
'Stealing without being found out?'
'Of course. Everyone does it. You have to make what you can.'
'But you have this marvellous talent,' I said.
'Sure. But I make things for money. I make what people like. I take their bread, whatever they'll pay.
Sure, I get a buzz when what I've made is brilliant, but I wouldn't starve in a garret for art's sake. Stones sing to me. I give them life. Gold is my paintbrush. All that, sure. But I'll laugh behind people's backs. They're gullible.
The day I understood all customers are suckers is the day I grew up.'
I said, 'I'll bet you never said all that to Greville.'
'Do me a favour. Grev was a saint, near enough. The only truly good person through and through I've ever known. I wish I hadn't cheated him. I regret it something rotten.'
I listened to the sincerity in his voice and believed him, but his remorse had been barely skin deep, and nowhere had it altered his soul.
'Jason,' I said, 'knocked me down outside St Catherine's Hospital and stole the bag containing Greville's clothes.'
'No.' The Jenks' denial was automatic, but his eyes were full of shock.
I said, 'I thought at the time it was an ordinary mugging.
The attacker was quick and strong. A friend who was with me said the mugger wore jeans and a woolly hat, but neither of us saw his face. I didn't bother to report it to the police because there was nothing of value in the bag.'
'So how can you say it was Jason?'
I answered his question obliquely.
'When I went to Greville's firm to tell them he was dead,' I said, 'I found his office had been ransacked. As you know. The next day I discovered that Greville had bought diamonds. I began looking for them, but there was no paperwork, no address book, no desk diary, no reference to or appointments with diamond dealers. I couldn't physically find the diamonds either. I spent three days searching in the vault, with Annette and June, her a.s.sistant, telling me that there never were any diamonds in the office, Greville was far too securityconscious.
You yourself told me the diamonds were intended for you, which I didn't know until I came here.
Everyone in the office knew I was looking for diamonds, and at that point Jason must have told you I was looking for them, which informed you that I didn't know where they were.'
He watched my face with his mouth slightly open, no longer denying, showing only the stunned disbelief of the profoundly found out.
'The office staff grew to know I was a jockey,' I said, 'and Jason behaved to me with an insolence I thought inappropriate, but I now think his arrogance was the result of his having had me face down on the ground under his foot. He couldn't crow about that, but his belief in his superiority was stamped all over him. I asked the office staff not to unsettle the customers by telling them that they were now trading with a jockey not a gemmologist' but I think it's certain that Jason told you.'
What makes you think that?' He didn't say it hadn't happened.
'You couldn t get into Greville's house to search it,' I said, 'because it's a fortress. You couldn't swing any sort of wrecking ball against the windows because the grilles inside made it pointless, and anyway they're wired on a direct alarm to the police station. The only way to get into that house is by key, and I had the keys. So you worked out how to get me there, and you set it up through the trainer I ride for, which is how I know you were aware I was a jockey. Apart from the staff, no one else who knew I was a jockey knew I was looking for diamonds, because I carefully didn't tell them. Come to the telephone in Greville's house for information about the diamonds. you said, and I obediently turned up, which was foolish.'
'But I never went to Greville's house . . .' he said.
'No, not you, Jason. Strong and fast in the motorcycle helmet which covered his orange hair, b.u.t.ting me over again just like old times. I saw him vault the gate on the way out. That couldn't have been you. He turned the house upside down but the police didn't think he'd found what he was looking for, and I'm sure he,didn't.'
'Why not?' he asked, and then said,'That's to say . . .'
'Did you mean Jason to kill me?' I asked flatly.
'No! Of course not!' The idea seemed genuinely to shock him.
'He could have done,' I said.
'I'm not a murderer!' His indignation, as far as I could tell, was true and without reservation, quite different from his reaction to my calling him a thie - 'What were you doing two days ago, on Sunday afternoon?'
I said.
'What?' He was bewildered by the question but not alarmed.
'Sunday afternoon,' I said.
'What about Sunday afternoon? What are you talking about?'
I frowned. 'Never mind. Go back to Sat.u.r.day night.
To Jason giving me concussion with half a brick.'
The knowledge of that was plain to read. We were again on familiar territory.
'You can kill people,' I said, hitting them with bricks.'
'But he said . . .' He stopped dead.
'You might as well go on,' I said reasonably, 'we both know that what I've said is what happened.'
'Yes, but . . . what are you going to do about it?'
'I don't know yet.'
'I'll deny everything.'
'What did Jason say about the brick?'
He gave a hopeless little sigh. 'He said he knew how to knock people out for half an hour. He'd seen it done in street riots, he said, and he'd done it himself. He said it depended on where you hit.'
'You can't time it,' I objected.
'Well, that's what he said.'
He hadn't been so wrong, I supposed. I'd beaten his estimate by maybe ten minutes, not more.
'He said you'd be all right afterwards,' Pross said.
'He couldn't be sure of that.'
'But you are, aren't you?' there seemed to be a tinge of regret that I hadn't emerged punch drunk and unable to hold the present conversation. Callous and irresponsible, I thought, and unforgivable, really. Greville had forgiven treachery; and which was worse?
'Jason knew which office window to break,' I said, and he came down from the roof. The police found marks up there.' I paused. 'Did he do that alone, or were you with him?'
Do you expect me to tell you?' he said incredulously.
'Yes, I do. Why not? You know what plea bargaining is, you just tried it with five diamonds.'
He gave me a shattered look and searched his common sense; not that he had much of it, when one considered.
Eventually, without shame, he said, 'We both went.'
'When?'
'That Sunday. Late afternoon. After he brought Grev's things back from Ipswich and they were a waste of time.'
'You found out which hospital Greville was in,' I said' 'and you sent Jason to steal his things because you believed they would include the diamonds which Greville had told you he had with him, is that right?'
He rather miserably nodded. 'Jason phoned me from the hospital on the Sat.u.r.day and said Grev wasn't dead yet but that this brother had turned up, some frail old creature on crutches, and it was good because he'd be an easy mark . . . which you were.'
'Yes'
He looked at me and repeated, 'Frail old creature,'
and faintly smiled, and I remembered his surprise at my physical appearance when I'd first come into this room.
Jason, I supposed, had seen only my back view and mostly at a distance. I certainly hadn't noticed anyone lurking, but I probably wouldn't at the time have noticed half a ship's company standing at attention.
Being with the dying, seeing the death, had made ordinary life seem unreal and unimportant, and it had taken me until hours after Jason's attack to lose that feeling altogether.
'All right,' I said, 'so Jason came back empty-handed.
What then?'
He shrugged. 'I thought I'd probably got it wrong.
Grev couldn't have meant that he had the diamonds with him.' He frowned. 'I thought that was what he said, though.'
I enlightened him. 'Greville was on his way to Harwich to meet a diamond cutter coming from Antwerp by ferry, who was bringing your diamonds with him.
Twelve tear drops and eight stars'
'Oh.' His face cleared momentarily with pleasure but gloom soon returned. 'Well, I thought it was worth looking in his office, though Jason said he never kept anything valuable there. But for diamonds... so many diamonds... it was worth a chance. Jason didn't take much persuading. He's a violent young b.u.g.g.e.r . . .'
I wondered fleetingly if that description mightn't be positively and scatologically accurate.
'So you went up to the roof in the service lift,' I said, 'and swung some sort of pendulum at the packing room window.'
He shook his head. 'Jason brought grappling irons and a rope ladder and climbed down tbat to the window, and broke the gla.s.s with a baseball bat. Then when he was inside I threw the hooks and the ladder down into the yard, and went down in the lift to the eighth floor, and Jason let me in through the staff door.
But we couldn't get into the stock-rooms because of Grev's infernal electronic locks or into the showroom, same reason. And that vault . . . I wanted to try to beat it open with the bat but Jason said the door is six inches thick.' He shrugged. 'So we had to make do with papers . . . and we couldn't find anything about diamonds. Jason got angry . . . we made quite a mess'
'Mm.'
'And it was all a waste of time. Jason said what we really needed was something called a Wizard, but we couldn't find that either. In the end, we simply left. I gave up. Grev had been too careful. I got resigned to not having the diamonds unless I paid for them. Then Jason said you were hunting high and low for them, and I got interested again. Very. You can't blame me.'