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Authors: Elizabeth George

Tags: #Mystery, #Thriller, #Suspense, #Adult

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BOOK: Well-Schooled in Murder
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16

 

 

Rather than use the underground parking, Lynley pulled up to the revolving door that gave access to the reception area of New Scotland Yard. The last of the departmental secretaries and clerks were making their exits for the day, heading towards the entrance to St. James’ Park Station across the street. Sergeant Havers sighed as she watched them leave, opening their umbrellas against the rain.

“If I’d only had the sense to choose a different career, I might have had a lifestyle that would allow me regular meals,” Havers said.

“But nowhere near the psychic satisfaction one gets from knowing the thrill of the chase.”

“Exactly my reaction to Giles Byrne,” she replied. “Although
thrill
hardly does it justice. Convenient, wouldn’t you say, that he’s the only person who knows the reason behind Edward Hsu’s suicide?”

“No. There’s another, Sergeant.”

“Who?”

“Matthew’s natural mother.”


If
you want to believe that story.”

“Do we have a reason not to?”

She hooted. “Sitting right there next to him on the couch, Inspector. Giving him a quick squeeze and a feel when the going got tough. Rhena. Wasn’t that her name? Don’t tell me our Giles doesn’t like the foreign ladies. But as to why they like him…God, I couldn’t even tell you. For all we know, Edward Hsu had a sister or a cousin or a significant someone who got too friendly with our little Giles and once he had his way with her and made our Matthew, he deserted her. Faced with the knowledge that his tutorial god had feet of clay, Eddie offed himself by taking a jump from the chapel roof.”

“That theory has some decidedly nice elements, Havers. Something between a Greek tragedy and a medieval morality play. The only trouble I have with it is one of credibility. Do you really believe that the boy would kill himself over discovering Giles Byrne’s fatal flaw? Be it infidelity, lack of moral fibre, inability to keep a commitment to duty, or anything else.”

“It’s a thought. I’d hold fast to it if I were you, sir. Mark my words. Our Giles wasn’t telling us the truth. Not by half. And my money’s on the fact that little Rhena knew it. He could lie like the devil and get away with it. But she didn’t look at us once while he was talking. Did you notice that?”

Lynley nodded, reaching for the door handle. “It was curious, wasn’t it?”

“Then what do you think about having a go at looking into his story in Exeter? How many homes can there be that take pregnant women? Wouldn’t the birth be registered? We’d be fools to accept Byrne’s story at face value.”

“We would,” Lynley agreed. He pushed open the car door. “Set Constable Nkata on it, Havers. In the meantime, let’s see if we’ve anything from the Slough police.”

They dashed through the rain into the reception area of New Scotland Yard. There, two plainclothes receptionists were chatting with the uniformed constable who stood at the barrier that separated the public waiting area from the guarded world of policework. His hands draped over the metal sign upon which black letters demanded the presentation of warrant cards and office passes. As Lynley and Havers reached for their identification, one of the two receptionists spoke.

“You’ve a visitor, Inspector. Been waiting since half-past four.” She nodded towards the wall on which was mounted the illuminated manuscript that celebrated on each page a distinguished piece of duty by a police officer.

On one of the chrome and vinyl chairs beneath this memorial sat a schoolgirl, still in uniform, with a satchel pressed close to her side and held in place by her arm, as if in fear of its being snatched away. She was watching the eternal flame across the room.

Lynley had heard of her, had seen her in the photograph in Matthew Whateley’s barn stall at Bredgar Chambers. But he had not been prepared for the fact that she looked far older than her thirteen years. Her skin was tawny, her eyes nearly black, her features perfectly sculptured on her face. Yvonnen Livesley, Lynley thought, Matthew’s old mate from Hammersmith.

When he crossed the lobby to the girl and introduced himself, she scrutinised him openly. “Your identification,” she said. “If you will.” He produced it. She read it. Her large eyes moved from it to his face. Dozens of her beaded plaits clicked together as she stood, nodding in satisfaction. “I’ve something to give you, Inspector. From Matt.”

 

 

 

In Lynley’s office, Yvonnen pulled a chair close to his desk. She pushed aside a stack of mail, putting her satchel in its place.

“I didn’t hear about Matt until this morning,” she said. “One of the blokes at school had it from his mum who had it from her sister who knows Matt’s aunt. When I heard…” She fumbled momentarily with the satchel’s buckle. “I wanted to go home at once and fetch this, didn’t I, but the Headmistress wouldn’t let me. Even when I told her it was police business. She treated me like a joke.” She unfastened the buckle, pulled the satchel open, and placed a cassette tape on Lynley’s desk. “Here’s what you want, then. Here’s the flaming bastard what killed him.”

That said, she sat and waited for Lynley’s reaction. Sergeant Havers closed the office door and took her place at the second chair.

Lynley picked up the tape. “What is this?”

Yvonnen nodded briskly, as if the question indicated he had passed a test of her private devising. She crossed one leg over the other and tossed back her hair. The beads jangled rhythmically. Reaching into the satchel a second time, she brought out a small tape recorder.

“The tape came in the post just three weeks past,” she explained. “Matt sent a note as well, telling me to keep it in the safest place I could find. Told me not to tell anyone about it, not to say I had it, not to say I’d even heard from him at all. He said it was a duplicate of one he had at the school and he’d explain everything when he saw me. That was all. I listened to it once, but I didn’t…I didn’t understand, did I? Until what happened to Matt. Listen.”

She took the tape from him and slid it into the recorder. A boy’s voice cried out—an indistinguishable word. It was followed by a grunt, a dull thud, and the hollow sound of thumping, as if a body had fallen against a bare floor and was being pounded repeatedly against it. A second cry was muffled. Then someone began to speak, a sinister whisper that was cold with a vicious perversity.

“Want a grind, nancy boy? Want a grind? Want a grind? Oooh, what’s this nice little thing in our panties? Hmmm? Let’s have a better look…”

Another cry. Another voice.

“Leave off. Come on. Leave off. Let him be!”

And then the first voice again, lower pitched in contrast to the second. “Oooh,
you
want some as well? Come here. Have a look.”

A third voice, fractured, close to tears. “Please. No.”

Then laughter. “You know you want it, nancy boy. You know how you do.” The sound of a blow. A cry muffled again.

Lynley leaned forward, switched the tape off.

“There’s more,” Yvonnen said in a rush. “It gets worse and worse. Don’t you want to hear it?”

“How do you come to have this?” Lynley asked in response.

Yvonnen ejected the tape and put it on the desk. “It gets worse,” she said again. “When I listened to it first, I didn’t understand. I thought…these boys, you see. They’re at this posh school. And things like this…” She stumbled wretchedly. For all the sophistication of her appearance and demeanour, she was indeed only thirteen years old.

Lynley waited until she had regained her composure. “You’re not to blame, Yvonnen,” he told her. “No one could expect you to understand what any of this meant. Just tell me what you know, as far as you know it.”

She raised her head. “Over the Christmas hols, Matt came round to see me. He asked me to show him how to wire a room for sound.”

“That sounds an unusual request.”

“Not from Matt to me. I play about with bugging devices. Matt knew that. I’ve been doing it for the last two years.”

“Bugging devices?”

“Like a hobby. I started out with just a tape recorder. In a soup tureen in the dining room. But now I use directional mikes. I like sounds. I want to do sound in films or for the telly. Like the bloke in
Blow Out
. Did you see that film?”

“No.”


He
did sound in films. That’s how I got interested. It was John Travolta,” she added ingenuously. “I’m dead good at it now. I wasn’t at first. The dining room sound from the soup tureen was all echoey, so I knew I couldn’t just hide a recorder. I needed something better. Something smaller.”

“A bug.”

“Just before Christmas I did my mum’s bedroom because I thought she might tell her boyfriend what presents I was getting. But the tape was dead boring. Just her moaning and groaning when her boyfriend did it to her and him saying things like ‘Oh, baby.’ I played it for Matt for a bit of a lark. And a tape of two masters talking at school.
That
one I did with a directional mike. From fifty yards. It was good.”

“That gave Matthew the idea of wiring a room at the school?”

She nodded. “All he would say was that he wanted to bug some room at the school and he wanted to know the best way to do it. He didn’t have any experience at it, but he was right earnest about getting it done. I thought he was doing it as a bit of a joke, so I told him the best thing would be to use a voice activated tape recorder. I loaned him this old one here. It came back in the post with the tape.”

“Did he tell you whose room he was wiring?”

“He didn’t tell me who. He just asked how to do it. I told him to hide the mike in a place where he wouldn’t get distortion from other noises, where he could still be sure he’d pick up the sounds he was interested in, where it wouldn’t be seen. I told him to check out the location in advance and run at least two rehearsals to make sure he got top quality sound. He asked one or two questions and took the recorder with him, but he never mentioned it after that. Then three weeks past, he sent me this tape.”

“Did he talk to you much about the school, Yvonnen? About his friends there? About how he was getting on?”

She shook her head slowly. “Just that it was all right. Nothing else. Just all right. But…” She frowned, played disconsolately with the buckle of her satchel.

“There’s something more?”

“Only that…he always changed the subject if I asked him about the school. Like he didn’t want to talk about it, but he knew he would if I pressed him. I wish I had.”

 

 

 

“Let’s see what kind of cobblers we’ve got. Come on. Let’s see. Oooh, little ones, aren’t they? Give ’em a squeeze. Will he cry now? What y’think? Will he cry?”

“No! Stop! Please! I shan’t—”

Lynley pressed the Off button as Sergeant Havers reentered his office. As before, she closed the door. But instead of sitting, she went to the window. Rain beat a sharp tattoo against the glass. She sipped from a disposable cup she was carrying. Lynley caught the fragrance of chicken soup.

“Did you send her off safely?” he asked.

“Constable Nkata’s driving her home.” Havers smiled wearily. “He took one look at her, saw the future in an instant, introduced himself, and volunteered for the duty.”

“Transparent as usual.”

“Nothing new in that.” Havers joined him at the desk, slumping onto one of the chairs. She meditated upon the yellow globules of liquid fat that dotted the surface of her soup. With a grimace, she drained the cup and tossed it in the rubbish. “It looks like we’ve come full circle.”

Lynley rubbed his eyes. They felt strained, as if he had been trying to read without his spectacles. “Possibly,” he replied.

“More than possibly,” she argued mildly. “We’ve got bullying on the tape. Just where we were yesterday morning, Inspector. You said that the third formers you spoke with seemed afraid, didn’t you? Now we know why. Someone was after Matt Whateley on a regular basis. For all the rest of the boys knew, they were next.”

Lynley shook his head. He ejected the tape. “I don’t see it that way, Havers.”

“Why not?”

“Because he told Yvonnen he wanted to wire someone else’s room for sound, not his own.”

“The bully’s room, then.”

“I’d agree with you, except there were other voices on the tape, not just the bully and his victim. The voices were young, third formers I should imagine.”

BOOK: Well-Schooled in Murder
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