The Welsh male voice was interrupted by the sound of a mobile phone ringing. Feet scuffled near the power point, the ring ceased and Geraint said:
“Oh, hello Jimmy… half a mo’—Aamir, close that door.”
More scuffling, footsteps.
“Jimmy, yes…?”
There followed a long stretch in which Geraint seemed to be attempting to stem the flow of a mounting tirade.
“Whoa—now, wai… Jimmy, lis… Jimmy, listen—
There followed a spell in which Strike thought he heard, very faintly, the rise and fall of Jimmy Knight’s fluent speech at the end of the telephone.
“I take your point,” said Geraint finally, “but I urge you to do nothing rash, Jimmy. He isn’t going to give you—Jimmy, listen! He isn’t going to give you your money, he’s made that perfectly clear. It’s the newspapers now or nothing, so… proof, Jimmy! Proof!”
Another, shorter period of unintelligible gabbling followed.
“I’ve just told you, haven’t I? Yes… no, but the Foreign Office… well, hardly… no, Aamir has a contact… yes… yes… all right then… I will, Jimmy. Good—yes, all right. Yes. Goodbye.”
The clunk of a mobile being set down was followed by Geraint’s voice.
“Stupid prick,” he said.
There were more footsteps. Strike glanced at Robin, who by a rolling gesture of the hand indicated that he should keep listening. After perhaps thirty seconds, Aamir spoke, diffident and strained.
“Geraint, Christopher didn’t promise anything about the pictures.”
Even on the tinny little tape, with the nearby shufflings of paper at Geraint’s desk, the silence sounded charged.
“Geraint, did you h—?”
“Yes, I heard!” snapped Winn. “Good God, boy, a first from the LSE and you can’t think of a way to persuade that bastard to give you pictures? I’m not asking you to take them out of the department, just to get copies. That shouldn’t be beyond the wit of man.”
“I don’t want more trouble,” muttered Aamir.
“Well, I should have thought,” said Geraint, “after everything Della in particular has done for you…”
“And I’m grateful,” said Aamir swiftly. “You know I am… all right, I’ll—I’ll try.”
For the next minute there were no sounds but scuffing footsteps and papers, followed by a mechanical click. The device automatically switched off after a minute of no talking, activated again when somebody spoke. The next voice was that of a different man asking whether Della would be attending “the sub-committee” this afternoon.
Strike removed the earbuds.
“Did you catch it all?” Robin asked.
“I think so,” said Strike.
She leaned back, watching Strike expectantly.
“The Foreign Office?” he repeated quietly. “What the hell can he have done that means the
“I thought we weren’t supposed to be interested in what he did?” said Robin, eyebrows raised.
“I never said I wasn’t interested. Just that I’m not being paid to find out.”
Strike’s fish and chips arrived. He thanked the barmaid and proceeded to add a generous amount of ketchup to his plate.
“Izzy was completely matter of fact about whatever it is,” said Robin, thinking back. “She couldn’t possibly have spoken about it the way she did if he’d—you know—murdered anybody.”
She deliberately avoided the word “strangled.” Three panic attacks in three days were quite sufficient.
“Got to say,” said Strike, now chewing chips, “that anonymous call makes you—unless,” he said, struck by a thought, “Jimmy’s had the bright idea of trying to drag Chiswell into the Billy business on top of whatever else he’s genuinely done. A child-killing doesn’t have to be true to make trouble for a government minister who’s already got the press on his tail. You know the internet. Plenty of people out there think being a Tory as tantamount to being a child killer. This might be Jimmy’s idea of adding pressure.”
Strike stabbed a few chips moodily with his fork.
“I’d be glad to know where Billy is, if we had somebody free to look for him. Barclay hasn’t seen any sign of him and says Jimmy hasn’t mentioned having a brother.”
“Billy said he was being held captive,” Robin said tentatively.
“Don’t think we can set much store on anything Billy’s saying right now, to be honest. I knew a guy in the Shiners who had a psychotic episode on exercises. Thought he had cockroaches living under his skin.”
“In the—?”
“Shiners. Fusiliers. Want a chip?”
“I’d better not,” sighed Robin, though she was hungry. Matthew, whom she had warned by text that she would be late, had told her he would wait for her to get home, so they could eat dinner together. “Listen, I haven’t told you everything.”
“Suki Lewis?” asked Strike, hopefully.
“I haven’t been able to work her into the conversation yet. No, it’s that Chiswell’s wife claims men have been lurking in the flowerbeds and fiddling with her horses.”