Murder in Hampstead Sabina Manea (books to read for beginners TXT) đ
- Author: Sabina Manea
Book online «Murder in Hampstead Sabina Manea (books to read for beginners TXT) đ». Author Sabina Manea
âPerhaps, but itâs a fact worth banking. Was there anyone else in the house who could have heard the row?â
âI donât think so. Adam had gone out. I heard Mrs Byrneâs steps going down the stairs back to the kitchen, so she was probably out of earshot.â
âWell, thank you again for your time, Miss Poole. If anything else occurs to you, please give me a ring anytime, day or night.â He handed her a business card, which she slipped into the pocket of her fitted dress.
As he turned to leave, Emiliaâs phone started vibrating noisily. It was on the kitchen table, within easy reach. She scooped it up with a deft hand, but not sufficiently fast to prevent Carliss from catching a glimpse of the callerâs name â Stewart Ross. She silenced it and set it aside with a dismissive glance.
They said their final, terse goodbyes at the door. Carliss decided on a detour via a greasy spoon for an imperative late breakfast. The first couple of places that could have been likely contenders had misleadingly retained the old shop windows but turned out to be serving coffee that took a good fifteen minutes to produce, despite the major role in the process being performed by a reliable Italian-manufactured machine. He was lucky on the third attempt â no calligraphed blackboard and a greasy linoleum floor patched with gaffer tape. It was time to give Lucia a ring.
Chapter 18
Lucia sat cross-legged on her bed, poring over her laptop, and surrounded by a growing pile of mugs and plates that she had been too engrossed in her train of thought to notice. A pattern of connections was gradually starting to take shape â a labyrinthine, asymmetrical spiderweb. She even managed to shut out the uniform whirr of the phone; it took Carliss three attempts before he heard her voice.
âSo, there you have it,â Carliss concluded, having delivered his account of the morningâs rendezvous. âI bent over backwards to pick holes in her story, but there arenât any. The only thing I can accuse her of is being well versed in social interaction with the opposite sex.â
Lucia chuckled. The poor unsuspecting man had fallen hook, line and sinker for Emiliaâs wholesome charm, as she had correctly predicted he would. Nevertheless, that didnât make the woman a liar or furnish her with a motive for the murder. âShe does make for a convincing ingĂ©nue,â she said, not without a hint of jealousy.
âShe mentioned her parents died in a car crash, but I didnât get a chance to probe any further,â added the inspector.
âI can fill in the gaps on that.â Lucia hadnât spent the entire morning locked up in her flat for nothing. âHer parents are â were â Richard and Christine Poole. For years they managed a small, exclusive investment fund in Mayfair â the minimally regulated kind that looks after people who want to keep a lid on the source of their funds. Their death made the papers, on account of the theatrical backdrop: âSecretive Financiers in Ferrari Smash-up on Italian Rivieraâ. You couldnât make it up. Their disastrous fame didnât end there. Shortly after the accident, it came to light that they had been mismanaging clientsâ money, dipping their hands in the cash, making reckless investments â you name it, they did it. The aftermath of litigation wiped out their entire estate. Even the serious financial publications entertained their readership with endless pictures of the enviable Chelsea house, now shamefully repossessed. There was a single mention of their daughter, an afterthought, but sufficient to confirm the link.â Lucia was in her element.
âSo that explains why she lives in a grotty house share. Long way to fall, from Chelsea to Bethnal Green,â Carliss concluded. âWhich makes it all the more peculiar why she gave up her cushy teaching job.â
âYouâre right, itâs a hell of a lifestyle change. But hear me out. Imagine youâre the adored only child of wealthy parents. One day, your whole world is shattered by a freak event. Isnât it plausible that she might have been affected? Mentally, I mean.â
âYouâre saying she lost her marbles?â
âShe wouldnât necessarily have to go as far as that. I think they call it depression these days, by the way. Itâs eminently treatable, but it could plausibly account for her behaviour.â
âSo, she was short of money. Thatâs not in itself a motive. I canât see how she would profit from the Professorâs death.â
âNeither can I. What intrigues me is her account of the so-called argument between the Professor and John Walker. Funny she didnât mention it before â she had plenty of opportunity, and surely any abnormal occurrence involving the victim is relevant.â
âYouâd be surprised what your mind blocks out following a shocking event.â
Lucia was, unsurprisingly, provoked. âYou donât actually buy it, do you? Amazing what a pair of limpid eyes and a tight dress can do to a manâs judgment.â The utterance came out more dramatically than she intended. She wasnât being objective, and she knew it. âSorry, Iâm a bit on edge. Too many hours in a confined space reading nonsense on the computer. We should check out this supposed quarrel. Iâve got a plan if youâll let me get on with it. Oh, and send me the Walkersâ home number, please.â
âGo for it. Just donât tell me how you got your results.â This time his tone was light. âAny idea who this Stewart Ross might be?â
âNot yet.â She did have a vague supposition, but it was not sufficiently well formed to be worth disclosing.
âRight. Iâve got to go. Let me know how you get on with Walker. And donât do anything stupid â by which I mean put yourself in danger.â
âIâm
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