Gray must have seen Jack looking doubtful, for he added quickly, “It has been in storage for a number of years, yet I don’t believe it has aged significantly.”
The garage opened to reveal an immaculate 1979 Allegro Equipe two-door sedan. It was painted silver with orange and red stripes down the sides and had alloy wheels and twin headlamps at the front. The paintwork glistened as though it had only just rolled off the production line. Dorian got in, started it at the first attempt and drove it into the sunshine.
“Remarkable!” said Jack after a pause.
“Isn’t it just?” answered Dorian as he got out, unlatched the hood and revealed an engine bay that didn’t have a spot of dirt or oil on it anywhere.
Jack smiled and got into the car. He could smell the freshness of the factory, and the orange velour seats still had the fuzz on them. He looked at the odometer. It had only 342 miles recorded.
“Where did you find it?” asked Jack incredulously. “This belongs in a museum. None would take it, of course, but it does.”
Dorian Gray looked to left and right and lowered his voice. “It’s not quite so strange as you think, Inspector. You see, every now and then I sell a car to a favored customer with my own…
Jack sensed a scam of some sort and narrowed his eyes. “Guarantee?”
“Yes. I guarantee that this car will never rust or even age significantly.”
“Waxoil and underseal, eh?”
“Better than Waxoil, Inspector. Allow me to demonstrate.”
They walked around to the back of the car, and Dorian opened the trunk. Inside was a finely painted oil of the same car, but in much shabbier condition. The car in the picture had rust holes showing up through the bodywork, a peeling vinyl roof, the trim was missing, and there was an unsightly scrape on the left rear, which had taken the bumper off. In short, a bit of a wreck. Jack looked at Dorian quizzically.
“See the rear windshield in the painting, Officer?”
Jack looked. It seemed normal enough. Dorian smiled again, removed the wheel brace from the trunk and shattered the rear window of the Allegro with one strong blow. Jack took a shocked step back at this apparently motiveless act of vandalism. Dorian, however, merely smiled.
“Look at the painting, Mr. Spratt.”
Jack frowned. He was certain that the car in the picture had
“Look at the car.”
The rear window was intact.
Dorian Gray put the wheel brace away, shut the trunk and smiled the enigmatic smile of a conjuror who has just caught a speeding bullet in his teeth and no way on hell’s own earth was going to let on how he did it.
“Everything you do to the car happens to the picture, Inspector. It never needs cleaning, repairing or servicing. It will stay new
“Forever?”
Dorian stared absently at his perfectly manicured nails.
“
“How much?”
“Eight hundred guineas.”
“I’ll take it.”
Dorian was quite happy to accept a check and moved several cars so Jack could drive out, the engine purring like a kitten brought up on cream. Jack was just signing a buyer’s agreement, in Dorian’s red pen and thinking he had gotten the bargain of the century, when Mary knocked on the window in a state of some agitation. She was holding her cell phone and waved it at him.
“I need to speak to you as a matter of some urgency, sir.”
“Don’t worry.” Jack smiled. “I won’t insist you drive it all the time.”
“It’s not the Allegro. It’s the Gingerbreadman.”
“What about him?”
“He’s escaped.”
Jack laughed.
“Sure he has. I do this joke to Madeleine all the time, and she…”
He stopped talking as he noticed that Mary was doing everything
“Who called you?” asked Jack, suddenly alert.