everythingâin Robâs eyes. âAnd why?â
âI donât know. All I know is I saw her body. That she was stabbed is news to me.â
McAllister looked at Joanne, who was sitting with her head in her hands saying nothing. Rob too looked lost, fiddling withhis pencil, staring at the table. Hector was sniffing, trying his best not to cry.
The shrill ring of the telephone made everyone jump.
â Gazette .â
âRob. Beauchamp Carlyle here. May I speak with Mr. McAllister?â
Rob thought that Beech, as he was known, had no need to introduce himself. His voice aloneâthat educated upper-class born-to-rule drawlâwould identify him. His guffaw that passed for a laugh and always made the listener join in even when they didnât get the joke endeared the man to all he met. Rob passed the receiver over.
âThereâs a disturbance at Mr. and Mrs. Smartâs house,â Beech said. âIâm at my sisterâsâshe lives next door. It seems Mr. McLeod is involved.â
âIâll be right over.â McAllister hesitated before asking, âHave you heard? No? Mrs. Smart died last night. Yes. Terrible news. Iâll see you in five minutes.â
âIâm coming too.â Rob was off before McAllister could stop him.
âJoanne. Could you hold the fort?â McAllister asked. âAny calls about Mrs. Smartâjust say nothing.â
It took Joanne a minute or so to realize Hec had sneaked out. She looked at the long expanse of empty table, wondering how they would be able to meet this weekâs deadline without Mrs. Smart, when the phone rang.
â Gazette . Oh, hello, Betsy. No. Mrs. Smart wonât be in.â Hearing the panic in the Gazette secretaryâs voice, Joanne knew she would have to break the bad news. Knowing that Busty Betsy, as the printers called her, hated climbing the narrow stone stairs in what Joanne considered too high-heeled shoes for a workday, she said, âYouâd better come upstairs.â
Thanks a lot, McAllister; dealing with a hysterical Betsy Buchanan is just what I donât need. But deal with Betsy she must; she had assured McAllister that knowing that her husband, Bill, was living with Mrs. Betsy Buchanan, war widow and assisted blonde, was not a problem.
It keeps him away from me, she had told McAllister. She would never admit her niggles of resentment; Betsy could wind Bill Ross round her little finger, whereas all Joanne had managed in ten years was to rile him, provoke him into hitting herâand worse.
*Â Â *Â Â *Â Â
The disturbance was over by the time Rob came roaring down the hill on his red Triumph motorbike. He parked on the pavement and went through the open gate leading to the back garden. The back of the large turreted mansion house faced the road leading to the south side of Loch Ness. The substantial gardens, bound by high stone walls, faced the river.
When he came in the garden gate, Rob saw three policemen: one talking to Mr. Beauchamp Carlyle, the other two talking to a man in a wheelchair. Holding onto the handles of the wheelchair stood a slight, Asian-looking man who seemed half the height of Mr. Beauchamp Carlyleâs six foot five. Beech wrote the âCountrysideâ column for the Gazette, and unknown to most, he was a major shareholder of the newspaper. There was no sign of Don.
Rob waved to Beech, who mimed Two minutes. Rob saw the man in the wheelchair, guessed he was Mrs. Smartâs husband, and wondered if it would be too crass to approach him. The arrival of a police car with Detective Inspector Dunne and a taxi with McAllister solved his dilemma.
Wee Hec, hiding behind a broken rhododendron bush, was pointing a camera, clicking so fast it sounded like a mad metronome.
McAllister waved Hec away with a shooing gesture but, ever the journalist, not before he was satisfied Hec had enough shots of the scene. McAllister also watched Rob