Spend Game
SPEND GAME
TO
To Wu Ch’ang, ancient Chinese god of wealth and good luck who hands out gold mountains to the humble and pious of heart, this book is humbly and piously dedicated.
Lovejoy
FOR
A story for John and Julie, Susan, Julia and the Port Sunlight Players, Pat and Roy, Elizabeth.
Constable & Robinson Ltd
55-56 Russell Square
London WC1B 4HP
www.constablerobinson.com
First published in Great Britain in 1980
This paperback edition published by Constable Crime,
an imprint of Constable & Robinson Ltd, 2013
Copyright © Jonathan Gash, 2013
The right of Jonathan Gash to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted by her in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988
All rights reserved. This book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade or otherwise, be lent, re-sold, hired out or otherwise circulated in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition including this condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser.
A copy of the British Library Cataloguing in
Publication Data is available from the British Library
ISBN 978-1-47210-287-4
eISBN: 978-1-47210-288-1
Printed and bound in the EU
1 3 5 7 9 10 8 6 4 2
Cover illustration: Peter Mac;
Cover design: www.simonlevyassociates.co.uk
Chapter 1
NO MATTER WHAT people say, you can’t help getting into trouble. And the antiques game is nothing but trouble – beautiful, lovely trouble all the bloody time.
This story starts where a pretty but terrified woman was holding my hand in a thunderstorm. We were looking down at the dead man in the ditch, and I was frightened too. In fact, I bet I was more scared than she was, because I knew roughly why he’d been killed. She didn’t.
The rain was hurtling down in great falling clouds. We were soaked and it was pitch-black. Occasional sheets of lightning washed the silent night sky into sudden silver, letting us see his face and our own aghast paleness. It was my friend from the auction, all right. We call him Leckie. The rumble of thunder from the east seemed to shut the light away and Sue and I hung on to each other’s hands for dear life. We slithered down the embankment from the road, calling out to see if he gave any sort of answer, though I think we both realized he was killed the moment he was flung clear of his tumbling car.
‘A torch, Lovejoy,’ Sue said frantically. ‘We need a torch.’ I was impressed. Women are so much more practical. Often useless, but permanently practical. She kept on about a torch, getting me mad.
‘I’ve not got one.’ I was literally shaking.
She sounded snappy. ‘Everybody with any sense keeps a torch in their car.’
‘I’ve not got one,’ I said back doggedly.
‘You should always keep –’
‘Shut up.’ I needed to think.
‘Headlights!’ Sue exclaimed, tugging at me. ‘Lovejoy, your headlights! You can turn your car this way with the lights on –’
‘– Then we can see what we already know,’ I finished for her. ‘That he’s already dead.’ She was getting me madder, as well as more frightened. What if the big car came back? It had been deliberate, blundering into a lunatic swerve and chucking Leckie’s little car into the air like that.
‘Have you a lighter?’
‘You know I don’t smoke.’
‘Then feel his pulse.’ This sort of thing turns my stomach over, but Sue might be right. You never know till you make sure.
We’d seen his flying body leave the car and hit the roadside tree, to flip brokenly aside towards the ditch. All these unlit country by-roads in East Anglia have ditches lined by hedgerows, though they were no shelter. Sue’s blonde hair was straggling across her face from the rain. We couldn’t get any wetter. The sheet lightning showed us how poor Leckie lay crookedly in the glistening mud, folded into the spattering ditch water, his left shoulder humped under a grassy overhang and his overcoat crumpled up above his waist. Leaving Sue’s hand I slid down towards the muddy bottom and reached along Leckie’s arm, thinking, Where the hell do you find a pulse? His hand felt warm. Dead, but warm. For a minute I pressed anxiously around his wrist, with no real hope of knowing what I was doing.
‘Well?’ Sue whispered down.
‘Well what?’
‘His pulse,’ she hissed.
‘I don’t even know what a bloody pulse is,’ I hissed back, though why we were whispering in a downpour at the bottom of a ditch with the nearest village six miles away, God alone knows. Death does it, makes whispers. Sue clucked from exasperation and slid down beside me with a muddy splash.
‘I’d better do it. You’re hopeless, Lovejoy . . .’
I pressed Leckie’s hand towards hers. She gave a small gasp as her fingers touched the cooling skin, but gamely stuck to the task. Every so often I listened for an approaching car, just in case. There had been two men in the sleek motor that had seen Leckie off. They had seemed casual enough to come driving coolly back with the intention of ‘finding’ the accident and reporting it to the police. They might have enough nerve, but would they be so stupid? They’d performed a swift, silent search, very businesslike and rather sinister.
‘Lovejoy,’ Sue whispered.
‘What?’
‘I can’t feel his pulse.’ A pause. ‘He’s dead.’
I pulled her up on to the tall roadside grass. We sloshed back to where my contraption was parked in the muddy gateway of a large field. The lightning was still busy battering the low valley. On the underbelly of the stormclouds to the south you could see the orange glow from our local town’s lights, some miles of wet fields and woods away.
‘What do we do, Lovejoy?’ she asked.
‘We go back.’
‘Back? To Medham?’ I’d attended the antiques auction in Medham that afternoon. It’s my game. I’m an antiques dealer.
‘No, Sue. To the main road.’
‘But the police, Lovejoy.’
I opened the door and pushed her in. The trouble with women is they think everybody else is law-abiding and peaceable. Their belief happens to be untrue but I usually go along with them to save bother.
‘You will phone the ambulance, Lovejoy?’ Sue demanded as I climbed in beside her.
I pretended to reflect a split second, then gave her a smile I hoped was reassuring. In that instant, dwelling on the relative usefulness of honesty and untruth, I settled swiftly for falsehood. It’s more predictable, especially when you’re in adverse circumstances like now. I’ve found that.
‘Of course,’ I said. I switched the engine on and gunned my archaic little bullnosed monster into creaking action. I drove for a few hundred yards by memory and the occasional lightning flash, one hand on the wheel and peering out into the driving rain, until Sue could stand it no longer.
‘Lights, Lovejoy. For heaven’s sake.’
‘Silly me!’ I switched them on and notched up to an aggresive twenty, which for me is flat out with a following breeze.
‘What is the matter, Lovejoy?’ Sue was eyeing me sideways as I drove.
‘It’s the shock, love,’ I said. It was that all right, because I knew something about Leckie. The more I thought, the more I remembered. We’d known each other on and off for some years.
‘They didn’t even go down to see if he was all right,’ Sue said angrily. ‘Those two men. Just getting out and walking over like that, looking in the car and on the grass. They didn’t even seem to care. You should report them.’ (Note: not we, nor I. You, Lovejoy. You should do
the reporting. That’s a typical woman for you – essential but woolly-minded.)
‘Well . . .’
‘You should, darling,’ she urged me earnestly. ‘Why, they seemed more interested in the poor man’s car than –’
I didn’t want her dwelling on that aspect too much so I broke in hastily. ‘Do you suppose they reported the accident?’ I asked innocently. After that we drove on in silence. Sue’s not daft. She didn’t think so either.
I got back to the main road, thankful for the absence of that powerful car’s immense staring lamps and the pair of cold malevolent lunatics that drove it. The storm was still on, but there was plenty of traffic now, switch-back lines of headlights undulating in the darkness, buses full of singing football supporters beering their way homewards from the big match, and juggernaut lorries unerringly finding pools to spray over my windscreen.
We drove back to the motorway café. Sue leaves her car there. It is convenient, only a few miles or so from where we live in our respective dwellings in apparent mutual disdain. Her car’s one of those long low things the size of a small bungalow, so we mostly use hers for our nocturnal discussions among the hedgerows. This particular night, though, some kind guardian gremlin had nudged me into insisting that we use my own elegant conveyance, a mercifully nondescript little banger I’d painted dark blue to disguise the scrapes. Of course, Sue grumbled like mad, but I get these stubborn moods. In summer there’s lovely sweet grass to lie on. I could see her point. I telephoned from a booth in the hallway while Sue waited outside. The police station asked my name and address. I obligingly invented the name of a mythical Mr Witherspoon of Solihull, poor chap, and reported finding an overturned car and a man probably dead.
‘I stopped four cars for help,’ I lied to confuse the issue in case Old Bill got a rush of blood to the head and started filing our footprints. ‘They’re waiting there for you.’
‘Where are you?’
I gave the name of a distant pub at Kelvedon. ‘In the taproom,’ I told him briskly. It was overdoing it a bit, but I like touches of local colour.
‘Wait there, please, Mr Witherspoon,’ the constable said, all efficient. ‘One of our cars will be with you shortly.’
‘Anything to help.’
‘You didn’t mention me, darling?’ Sue checked as I returned to the car. I said of course not. When we’re together in public she develops that reserved ultra-cool look of the secret sinner, a woman ever so polite but who obviously can’t really be bothered with this nerk opposite transparently boring her to death.
It was time to go, Sue being due back home. I raced out with her into the rain. We ran stiff and hunched, holding hands.
‘I’m still shaky,’ she said in her car.
‘Me too.’
‘Drive safely, Lovejoy.’ The accident was on her mind.
‘Don’t I always?’
‘No, love,’ she said. ‘Do try.’
We said a protracted farewell. Sue’s husband would be home about ten. She had a safe hour to spare when we finally parted, which is our usual safety margin unless passion’s particularly rampant. Sometimes we cut it pretty fine.
I waved her off into the streaming traffic and splashed back into the café’s brittle glare, but only when I was sure she wasn’t going to turn round with some afterthought. I still had some change. The emergency call had cost nothing. Tinker Dill would still be sober so early in the evening, thank God, even at the weekend. I’m so used to phoning him at the White Hart its number’s engraved on my cortex.
I got through first time. The public bar sounded crammed and noisy. Some charitable soul amputated Tinker from the bar and dragged him to the blower.
‘Whatcher want, Lovejoy?’ He was peeved as hell. ‘You seen me all bleeding day at the auction.’
‘Just listen, Tinker,’ I said, putting my threatening voice on. ‘And don’t radio what I say all round the pub.’ I felt his sulks come over, force five.
‘Have I to go out?’ He hates leaving a pub.
‘No. Today’s auction. Leckie bought an escritoire, right?’
‘Yeah, and –’
‘Shut up,’ I snarled. ‘I told you. Say nothing, just tell me if I missed anything.’ The White Hart’s one of those rambling old East Anglian pubs where antiques dealers congregate in droves. Even the woodworms have ears.
‘Don’t get shirty, Lovejoy,’ Tinker whined. He has a specially humble stoop for whining. I could see him doing it now.
‘And a crummy doctor’s case, Victorian?’
‘Bleeding horrible it was,’ Tinker cackled indignantly.
‘Bloody prices –’
‘And that book.’ We paused, thinking. There had been seven hundred items auctioned at Virgil’s auction house in Medham that day, a long stint relieved only by ecstasy, beauty, excitement and the scent of profit. A typical country auction in a typical country town. I avoided mentioning Leckie’s accident. They would hear at the White Hart soon enough, preferably when I was there. And I’d make certain I looked as astonished as everybody else when the bad news came.
‘That’s all, Lovejoy.’
‘Sure, Tinker?’
‘Yeah.’ Another pause while his brain swam out of its alcoholic fog. ‘Here, Lovejoy,’ he croaked in what he imagined was a secret whisper, ‘we in trouble again?’
‘No, Tinker. See you in a minute or two.’
I left the caff and drove with the rest of the traffic towards the orange sky-glow. The rain was easing now and the cars fewer. I would reach the pub a bit later than usual but the other dealers wouldn’t notice because we turn up at all hours. First, I had one job to do.
Leckie’s one of those people who never seem much while they’re knocking about, yet when they depart leave a rather depressing space. We’d been in the army together for a spell, in one of those nasty little wars we used to have going on simultaneously in a dozen places. Leckie and I were in the same artillery unit. He’s one of those odd calm Englishmen you get now and then who look great on camels and are naturally full of linguistics whether they come from the slums of Moss Side or a duke’s stately home. Leckie always managed to convey the impression that no matter how accurate the desert snipers were the main problem was having sherry trifle properly served when the bishop called for croquet on the lawn. I was posted to a snowbound war as punishment for getting malaria. I never saw him after till he turned up here.
I found myself smiling as I drove, remembering his arrival. He was a Keswick man, thin and pleasant. He took as naturally to tweeds and hand-sewn leather shoes as a duck to water. It was a noisy Saturday night when he’d sailed in, found me and strolled across. We said hello and chatted. He was out of a job.
‘What’s the local industry, Lovejoy?’ he’d asked, forcing himself to like the gin. It was labelled BEST LONDON BRANDS BLENDED, but only for the sake of appearances.
‘Well, we’re mostly antiques dealers,’ I told him. He grinned, shrugged and looked us over, in that order.
‘That’ll have to do,’ he said casually, as if the whole of East Anglia had made him an offer and he hadn’t much else on that day.
‘Know anything about antiques, Leckie?’ Mind you, most antiques dealers are utterly clueless about antiques. And the good old public comes a close second.
‘No. What does one do?’ He watched me grin and shake my head. I told him he hadn’t changed. ‘I suppose it’s buying and selling, something in that line?’ he’d gone on, still not batting an eyelid.
That was Leckie all over. Didn’t care much about difficulties, knowledge and education. He just knew his attitude would carry him through. Most times he’d been right. Like the time our platoon went into a high scrubland plateau where the tribes spoke a weird private language of clicks, hisses and croaks. Within a week he was our official translator, having absorbed the language by a sort of osmosis.
We were never really very close once he started in antiques, just casual competitors in a fierce trade. I don’t think I had a
ny special affection for him, even though I’d known him some years. You just don’t get many Leckies to the pound, not these days.
I turned off the motorway into town. Our two cinemas and fifty-seven pubs were still hard at it, but the shops had that benign retirement look which all showy glass fronts get after the Saturday rush. A few people strolled, or waited for the buses to take them out into the countryside or down along the estuary to their cold sea-sprayed cottages on the harbour walls. Our town’s one official tart was already out, well wrapped, by the furniture shop. I wagged an arm and shouted, ‘Wotcher, Jo,’ to show I wasn’t biased, then put my ancient little crate, every erg agog, hard at the slope below the preserved cathedral ruins. It spluttered bravely up towards the garrison.
We’re a garrison town; in fact, never have been anything else since Cymbeline did his stuff and Claudius landed. You wouldn’t think it, though, because the barracks are now tidied away between the football grounds and encroaching woods, and in any case low terraced houses submerge much of the evidence. You can see the layout of the barracks and spiderhuts from the train, but only if you know where to look. I hurtled at a breathless fifteen into a small street near the barracks and jerked my horseless carriage to a wheezing stop outside a quiet little pub. There were three other cars by the pavement, all innocent. I made sure nobody was in the street as best I could – there are only four or five street lamps there, and they’re still those old gas-mantle standards kids can climb up or use for cricket stumps. I hurried round the back street and went into the little stone-flagged yard of the house next to the pub. A knock on the window like a clandestine lover.
‘It’s Lovejoy,’ I said. The light came on over the yard door. Val let me in, her face disapproving.
‘You know the time?’ she said. I nodded and shook rain all over the carpet.
‘I’ll not be a minute, love. Has Leckie been?’
‘No.’
‘Not to leave anything? No messages?’
‘No.’ She was right to look puzzled. ‘Should he have called? You didn’t tell me. Is anything wrong?’
She gave me a nip of rum for the cold. Val and I had been friends in the roaring days of youth, learning our adolescent snogging techniques in joint training sessions in school lessons quaintly called ‘Agriculture: Methods and Theory’. Education’s gone downhill since then. She’d married George, who’s the barman at the next-door pub, an arrangement which saves on fares and leaves Val sufficiently free to run an antiques sideline. She does no dealing herself, only guards what’s given her until it’s collected. Posh London dealers have their own depositories. Lone antiques dealers either do without or have a safe lock-up arrangement with some trustworthy soul like Val.