‘We’re not sure,’ said Biddulph. ‘Which is why we’re speaking to everyone he was in contact with over the last week or so. We found a copy of a cheque for five hundred pounds in his desk, a cheque dated last Saturday.’
‘That’s right.’
‘Can you tell me what that was for?’
‘For?’
‘It’s a lot of money, can you tell me why you gave it to him?’
Carolyn shrugged. ‘He was doing some work for me.’
‘What, specifically?’ asked Biddulph.
‘Does that matter?’
‘It would, if he was blackmailing you,’ said the sergeant.
‘What?’ said Carolyn.
‘Sergeant Marriott is speaking hypothetically,’ said Biddulph, flashing his sergeant a withering look.
‘You think I killed him because he was blackmailing me?’
Biddulph put up a hand. ‘We’re following several lines of inquiry,’ he said. ‘But, at the moment, we are looking for a motive.’
‘Well, Max wasn’t blackmailing me. The idea’s ridiculous. I have another fan who has been following me a little too zealously. Max helps me sort things out like that. He was going to track them down and then get them to stop.’
‘And how does he do that, exactly?’ asked Marriott, scribbling furiously in her notebook.
‘Usually just making contact is enough,’ said Carolyn. ‘But if that doesn’t deter them, Max sets a lawyer on them.’
‘And do they ever get violent, these fans?’ asked Biddulph.
‘No, they’re just a bit deluded. You surely don’t think one of my fans killed Max, do you?’
‘We’re just looking at all lines of inquiry at the moment,’ said the inspector. ‘So when was the last time you saw him?’
‘Saturday. When I gave him the cheque.’
‘Did he usually make house calls?’
Carolyn shrugged. ‘We work long hours and I didn’t want him turning up at the studio. Saturday worked for him, too. He came around to the house and I gave him the cheque.’
‘And you didn’t see him again?’ asked Biddulph.
Carolyn shook her head.
‘Did you speak at all?’
Carolyn looked at the inspector, keeping her face impassive. She knew that, as a detective, he would be good at reading people but, as an actor, she was equally adept at hiding her true emotions and feelings. They had already said his phone had been stolen so she could probably lie about the call that Dunbar had made yesterday. But, even without the phone, they would be able to check his calls with the phone company and they would have a record of all the calls he had made. There was no point in lying or being evasive. They might even already know that he had called her. ‘He phoned me once, just to tell me he was still working on the case.’
‘When was that?’ asked Marriott, looking up from his notebook.
‘Yesterday, actually.’
‘When, precisely?’
‘Sometime in the morning.’
‘I really could do with a definite time,’ said Marriott.
‘Elevenish, I guess.’
‘That’s about the time he was killed, Mrs Castle,’ said Marriott, and Biddulph flashed her another withering look. Carolyn realised that was information he didn’t want her to have.
‘It was really just a check call, to say he’d be making more enquiries.’
‘And can you give us the fan’s name?’
‘I don’t have it to hand,’ said Carolyn. ‘I got a couple of letters and I gave them to Max.’ That was a lie but she doubted it would be a problem. And it would cause her a lot less grief than telling them about Warwick Richards. She figured that was one can of worms best left unopened.
CHAPTER 54
Terry looked over the top of his wine glass at Carolyn and narrowed his eyes. ‘You’re as mad as the proverbial hatter, you know that?’ It was close to midnight and they were sitting in Carolyn’s kitchen. Filming had kept her in the studio until after ten and, as Billy was driving her home, she’d phoned Terry and asked him if he fancied a nightcap. As they’d demolished a bottle of Nuits St Georges from Gabe’s cellar, she’d told him about the visit from the two detectives.
‘Why do you say that?’
‘What, the day after Max Dunbar is murdered, you’re going out onto a boat with Warwick Richards?’
‘You think there’s a connection?’
‘Carolyn, will you listen to yourself? You pay Dunbar to check up on Richards and five days later someone cuts his throat.’
‘Oh, come on, Warwick’s not like that.’
‘What do you mean, he’s not like that? He’s absolutely like that. You saw him kill Cohen with a blunt instrument, have you forgotten?’
‘I saw someone who looks like Warwick hit Cohen over the head. We don’t know that Cohen’s dead, remember?’
‘Well I called his office this afternoon and he’s still not turned up.’
‘You did not.’
‘Bloody right I did. His office has no idea where he is or when he’ll be back.’ He sipped his wine. ‘You need to keep the hell away from Richards. Seriously.’
Carolyn sighed. ‘We don’t know for sure it was him I saw in Cohen’s house.’
‘Only you know that, darling.’
‘Exactly. And the more I think back, the less I think it was Warwick.’
‘And you think Dunbar being killed is just a coincidence?’
‘His house wasn’t in what you’d call a salubrious area,’ she said. ‘Break-ins aren’t unusual, drug addicts looking to pay for their latest fix.’
‘You believe that? Seriously?’