Death of a Gentle Lady
bell. Jimmy answered the door, his eyes bloodshot and a strong smell of whisky emanating from him.
‘Hamish! What’s up?’
‘Let me in, Jimmy, and I’ll tell you.’
Jimmy listened carefully and then said, ‘I’ll put some coffee on. I need a clear head.’
He went off to the kitchen and came back with two mugs of black coffee.
‘Now, let me get this straight,’ he said. ‘You see Harold Jury acting as Lady Macbeth. He’s got small feet. So you immediately decide that he might be a murderer. He’s a fairly well-known author, Hamish.’
‘Not that well known. He was only nominated for the Booker.’
‘What are you getting at? That he might not be Harold Jury? He was interviewed by Strathbane Television, and no one popped up to say that man is an impostor.’
‘Humour me, Jimmy. I daren’t go down to London again. Phone the Met in the morning without Blair hearing you and get someone to go round to his flat and check with the neighbours for a description.’
‘No need for that. There’s probably a photograph of him on the Internet.’
Jimmy switched on the computer. Hamish waited anxiously. ‘Here we are. It’s Harold all right.’
‘Let me see.’
‘There he is at the awards ceremony.’
‘It’s hard to tell from that photo,’ said Hamish. ‘Looks the same. Hey, look at his feet. Can you enlarge that?’
‘Sure.’
‘See!’ said Hamish, practically quivering with excitement. ‘Normal large feet.’
‘You mean our Harold may have stolen the real Harold’s identity?’
‘Could be.’
‘Look, Hamish, I’ll go to the hotel in the morning and take his fingerprints. If he is who he says he is, we’ll look right fools. Also, I’ll need a right good excuse to ask for his fingerprints. If he refuses and phones Strathbane, and I have to explain your mad idea, I’ll get a rocket for going along with it.’
‘I tell you what, I have the fingerprint kit. I’ll get the manager to tell me when he’s out of his room. I’ll lift a print and bring it over to you.’
‘Don’t get caught, whatever you do. I’m sobering up and the soberer I get, the dafter your idea seems!’
* * *
Hamish barely slept that night. He headed to the hotel first thing in the morning and went into the manager’s office, carrying his fingerprint kit in a bag.
‘You’re up early,’ said Mr Johnson.
‘I’ve a favour to ask. I want to get into Harold Jury’s room while he’s out.’
‘He’s out all right. He left in the middle of the night. Asked the night porter for his bill and cleared off.’
‘Get me to that room before the maids clean it! And give me a description of the car he was driving and the registration number.’
The hotel room was neat and tidy, and the bed had not been slept in. Hamish took out his fingerprint kit and began to dust the surfaces. He swore under his breath. Everything seemed to have been wiped clean.
Where in a hotel room would even a careful villain forget to wipe? He went into the bathroom and carefully dusted the handle of the cistern on the toilet with aluminium powder. ‘Bingo,’ he muttered. ‘One perfect print.’
He carefully peeled it off, rushed out, and headed to Strathbane after calling Jimmy.
A thinner, whiter Blair came lumbering up while Jimmy and Hamish were searching the fingerprint database. ‘Whit’s up?’ he demanded.
Jimmy explained hurriedly. ‘Havers,’ said Blair. ‘Get back to your village, Macbeth.’
‘Anything the matter?’ Daviot loomed up behind them.
Jimmy explained again while Blair silently fumed over his superior’s habit of gliding silently into the detectives’ room.
‘Got it!’ cried Jimmy. ‘Look at this!’
Up it came on the screen. Real name, Cyril Edmonds. Charged in 1999 with sending a letter bomb to his ex-fiancée. Served eighteen months.
‘We’d better get the Met round to Harold Jury’s address to see what happened to him,’ said Hamish.
‘I set up roadblocks when you phoned, and the trains and airports are being watched,’ said Jimmy. ‘We sent out a description of his car and the registration number. The very fact that he wiped his fingerprints off everything in the room he could think of damns him.’
‘You should have reported to me first,’ howled Blair.
‘There wasn’t time,’ said Jimmy. ‘You were out.’
‘I’ll go and search up in the hills,’ said Hamish. ‘If he’s clever, he’ll find a place to hide out until he thinks the hunt is dying
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