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The Dirty Duck Part 21

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James Carlton Farraday stood in Dulles Airport with the tall, black policeman for whom he had formed a definite attachment ever since the officer-Sergeant Poole-had actually gone out and found some Jell-O.

"I told him, miss," said Sergeant Poole to the flight attendant. "But he doesn't believe me." Sergeant Poole looked down at the cat-carrier, one designed to meet all of the specifications of air travel. The gray cat was grooming itself, as certain of its privilege as was James Carlton.

The young lady in the uniform of British Airways knelt down (James Carlton wished grown-up women would simply talk to him from up where they stood) and smiled (he also wished they wouldn't look sticky that way) and said, "It's too bad, dear, it really is; but the United Kingdom just won't let animals into the country."

James Carlton sighed. "Now that's about the silliest thing I ever did hear. There's more cats in England than anywhere I ever seen-saw, I mean. You going to tell me they was all born over there?"

The flight attendant laughed artificially, casting a desperate look at Sergeant Poole. He smiled and shook his head and shrugged. The sergeant seemed to know when he'd been bested.



In a reasoning-with-a-child tone, the young lady went on. "It's not precisely that the animal can't go in-"

Here comes some other big lie, thought James Carlton, studying the faces of the people probably waiting to board his flight and deciding which ones he wasn't going to sit beside.

". . . it's the quarantine laws. The cat would have to be quarantined for nine months, you see . . ."

"That's a pretty stupid law. This cat don't-doesn't-have rabies, nor anything like that. For the lord's sakes, I been kidnapped with this cat for five, six days. I ought to know. You got any idea what this cat's been through?"

Actually, the cat hadn't been through all that much, considering. Except for being forcibly yanked down that big tree.

The poor young woman shrugged. "I don't make the laws, James-" And then she did something utterably unthinkable, at least as far as James Carlton was concerned. She pinned a tag to his sweater and patted it.

A tag? He craned his neck to look at it. It had his name and destination on it So horrified was he that he forgot his manners, not to say his education. "Ah, h.e.l.l, lady! I ain't wearing that! I know who I am and I know where I'm going!" He yanked the tag off and handed it back.

White-faced, she seemed truly not to know what to do. "We're merely trying to a.s.sure that you don't get-" And even as she brought out the word it was clear she'd have liked to retract it: "-lost."

Sergeant Poole burst out laughing.

When Jimmy Farraday arrived at Heathrow Airport at nine fifty-five that same night, it was difficult to say which of them-Farraday or Penny-was happier to see him.

Farraday tried on his gruff act-cigar in mouth, small punch at Jimmy's shoulder-but it soon broke down into a simple embrace. Penny's own joy was expressed in a plethora of salty words and newly handled cigarettes (the latter supplied by Jury). When Penny's enthusiasm for Scotland Yard was about to burst, Jury gave her a look.

The look silenced Penny, but it was clear that Jimmy had seen the whatever-secret-knowledge that had pa.s.sed between them, and stuck out his hand. "Pleased," was his simple and heartfelt acknowledgment of this grown-up towering over him.

(Jury noticed he had quickly rid himself of that other grown-up-the one following him in British Air uniform.) "Pleased, myself," said Jury. And he was, for the first time in days.

James Carlton Farraday, who had left the past and all of its trials behind him for the present, turned his attention to his sister, and gave directions in the manner of one who would not be crossed.

The first was: "Watch your language, Penny. I told you, They always know by how you talk."

The second: "We got a new cat. They wouldn't let me bring it."

The third: "They had this movie on the plane I swore I seen-saw-before-"

And they were walking away, when Penny asked, "Yeah? What was it?"

"Missing," said Jimmy Farraday. "It was kind of dumb-"

Jury noticed that J. C. Farraday walked a respectful distance behind brother and sister, sister now taking brother's hand- As Jimmy said, "Except it had Sissy s.p.a.cek in it." Then he seemed to look quickly around him, making sure no Memory that had been listening over the years was b.u.t.ting in. "Remember?"

Jury had never felt Heathrow to be so unpeopled, such a void, as he felt it now.

Penny answered, "I remember."

III.

STRATFORD.

"Brightness falls from the air."

-Thomas Nashe.

36.

"The computer guy," said Sam Lasko again, shaking his head in wonder. "I can't get over it. He seemed like such an elf."

Lasko and Jury were sitting in the incidents room in the Stratford police station. "One I don't want to see under any mushrooms," said Jury. "He planned it for a long time. A very long time."

"You don't seem too happy about it."

"No. Am I supposed to be?"

"I only mean, in figuring it out. I really did think it was some creep around here had nothing better to do with his time-"

Jury smiled. "The way you put things, Sammy . . ."

Lasko shrugged. "Well, you know what I mean. Anyway, I was sorry to see you go." Lasko's expression turned mournful, as if Jury were a too-seldom-seen relation.

"I'd never have guessed."

"So where'd Schoenberg get the pa.s.sport?"

"In the U.S. One a.s.signment he gave that private detective was to get one of Jimmy's school pictures. The little ones they do over there. Just right for a pa.s.sport. And then produce a facsimile of a birth certificate, which he got very easily merely by making a request as Jimmy's father. He was really the only one, besides brother Jonathan, who knew what name was on the certificate."

"And he took that kid all the way back to the States . . ." Lasko sighed. "You ever been-?"

"No, Sammy. But Penny Farraday nearly had me swear on a Bible I'd come and visit them."

Lasko shook his head. "I can't get over this Schoenberg. To go to all that trouble-?"

"The man was obsessed, Sammy. He'd been going to a lot of trouble for years. Private detectives, the lot."

"Christ. The guy must have gone absolutely off the rails over this Altman woman."

"He did. 'Dust hath closed Helen's eye.' " Jury pocketed his cigarettes and stood up. "He definitely did. See you later, Sammy."

Jury was nearly out the door when Lasko (who had all the while been eyeing certain papers on his desk) said, "Listen, Richard-"

"Forget it, Sammy."

37.

Beyond the Royal Shakespeare Theatre, the river Avon flowed on, undisturbed.

"Hamlet again," said Melrose Plant. "Are you sure I can't induce you to join me? The first part was quite good. I missed the second." He did not want to go into his reasons for missing the second part of the play, not once, but twice.

"Thanks, no," said Jury. "I think I've had enough of revenge tragedies to last me awhile." It was evening, and there was a storm coming on, and light had fled from the water. Jury watched the ducks bobbing in the shadows of the willows, like lumps of coal. "You're going back to Northants tomorrow?"

"Yes, I expect so. When Agatha's there, one occasionally has to count the silver. The American cousins, happily, have returned to Wisconsin. I believe they must have hightailed it out of here after the last . . . well, you know. Not even Agatha's plying them with promises of high teas at the manor house-as I'm sure she did do-could keep them here. So the Biggets and Honeysuckle Tours are all safely at home by now. I think I should like to visit Hialeah racetrack. I would imagine Lady Dew is odds-on favorite. Well, if you won't attend the theatre, then how about a drink at the Duck afterwards?"

"I have a bit of business to attend to."

"I see."

"No, you don't."

"No, I don't."

Jury smiled. "You're a very accommodating chap, you know."

"I know."

There was a brief silence, and then Jury said, "Do you really think she's going to marry that bloke?"

Innocently, Melrose inquired, " 'She'? 'Bloke'?"

Looking across the water, Jury said, "Awful, wasn't he? I shouldn't have thought Vivian would go in for that type." He glanced at Melrose. "Did you find her much changed?"

"Vivian? Vivian?" Plant stalled around by inspecting his gold cigarette case.

"At times, you can be tiresome. Yes, 'Vivian-Vivian.' Didn't you go on about the old days with her?"

Melrose plucked out a cigarette and offered the case to Jury. "Good lord, no. Barely exchanged the time of day."

Jury took a cigarette, and just looked at him, shaking his head.

"Anyway, they're not married yet. If I know Vivian, she won't go through with it. Never could make up her mind about anything important." Leaving that cloudy judgment hanging in air, Melrose looked at his watch. "I'd better be going. I'll miss the second part again. If you should change your mind, I'll be in the Dirty Duck after the play. . . ." Melrose paused a moment, and then said, "I suppose you'd as soon forget the whole business. But at one point in that business of questioning Schoenberg, you weren't exactly h.e.l.l-on-wheels. You certainly left the room quickly enough, there at the end."

"Yes. Maybe it was because I didn't much care for my own reactions: I mean, I stood there knowing what Schoenberg had done, and yet-" Jury looked out over the darkening water. "He loved her that much."

38.

Jury walked down Ryland Street to Number 10 and knocked on the door. A woman, small and kind-eyed, answered.

"I'm a friend of Lady Kennington. Is she in?"

The little woman looked so puzzled that for a moment Jury thought he must have come to the wrong house. But then her face cleared. "Oh, you mean Jenny, is that it?" When Jury nodded, she said, "But I'm so sorry. You see, she's gone."

There was in the word such a note of finality, Jury didn't have to question its meaning. His own face, however, must have registered such disappointment that she felt herself the author of it, a messenger come for the express purpose of bearing terrible news. "Really, I am sorry. It was yesterday. She moved just yesterday."

Yesterday. It had to have been yesterday.

When Jury did not reply, the messenger seemed to feel she had to make it all as clear as possible. "She got a call from a relative, I think. I believe she left sooner than she expected to." The woman apparently wanted in some small way to defend this action on the part of Lady Kennington, which might have been regarded as somewhat capricious by this stranger on her doorstep, who was not replying and still not moving. "I've only just moved in today, you see." There was a tiny, artificial laugh. "Haven't got myself sorted out yet, really."

"I'm sorry I've disturbed you-"

Her hand moved in a fluttering gesture as she said quickly, "Oh, not at all, no." There was a tentative move then, away from the door, and an invitation for Jury to enter, as if she felt she were adding insult to injury by being inhospitable as well as uninformative.

He thanked her, but shook his head. "She didn't happen to leave a message for anyone, did she?"

Sadness seemed actually to smite her, to make her feel ashamed, as she shook her head. "Not with me, she didn't. Of course, you might try the estate agent."

He thanked her again and realized, only after she had closed the door, he hadn't got the name of the estate agent from her. He raised his hand to knock again and then let it fall. Tomorrow- Walking back up the street he wondered if he would return tomorrow or if fate had decided the matter for him.

Jury crossed the street between the Dirty Duck and the theatre, walking toward the river, aimlessly. Under the branches of the line of oaks, each tree decorated with strings of lights, as if it were Christmas, came the last of the theatregoers, their umbrellas black against the reflected light, runners in the rain, late for the performance.

He sat on the same bench near the river where he had sat with Penny what seemed an age ago, his hands bunched in his coat pockets, unmindful of the rain. When it was full dark, he got up and walked back toward the theatre, the parking lot attendant leaning bored against his kiosk, as behind the gla.s.s doors of the theatre the black-uniformed ushers looked out, apparently equally bored. Jury took the path that ran in total darkness behind the theatre and near the river, and that pa.s.sed the bra.s.s-rubbing center.

It was from that direction he heard the drowsy laughter that sharpened at his approach into giggles, although he knew they couldn't see him in this pitch-darkness. Schoolchildren-he knew it from the giggles and the lighted coals of cigarettes. When he was closer he could make out the boys sitting on the wall of the Doric-columned building. It wasn't until he was nearly on top of them that they saw him. The laughter stopped quickly, and the voices.

They were out here larking when they probably were supposed to be inside, watching Shakespeare and getting educated.

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