The Cold, Cold Ground
mind. I had spent about ten quid but had gotten enough records that I was going to have trouble getting them home.
“Do you want to head?” I asked her.
She nodded.
I went to the auctioneer’s assistant, gave him my lots, paid my money and got my discs. The Dusty in Memphis album turned out to be number eleven of a limited edition signed by Dusty Springfield and Jerry Wexler. Karmically there was no way I could keep it. “Laura, here, this is for you,” I said, giving her the album.
We were leaving when I saw that a low-key bidding war was going on between Freddie Scavanni and Sammy.
They were both after a pressing of Richard Strauss’s Ariadne auf Naxos by Karl Bohm and the Vienna State Orchestra that had been recorded live for Strauss’s eightieth birthday on 11 June 1944 in the presence of many top Nazis. It was a very rare record indeed but the bidding was only going up in twenty-pence increments and now stood at two pounds sixty.
I was disgusted and sad for Paul. I went outside with Laura.
“Do you want to go back to my place for a cup of tea?” she asked.
It was a good idea. I could leave the records at her house and come back for them when I had the car.
We went to her flat and she put the kettle on. I hadn’t been there since we’d made love. Nothing had changed. Except spiritually. Emotionally.
I sat in the easy chair and looked at the harbour.
“Thank you so much for this album,” she said.
“You’re welcome.”
“I’ve never heard her before.”
“You’re going to love it.”
“Why don’t you put it on?”
I went to the turntable, cleaned the record with my antistatic cloth and put on the B-side, which begins with the Randy Newman song “Just One Smile”.
“You probably shouldn’t play this too much, it’s very valuable,” I told her as Dusty’s breathy vocals competed with the heavy strings on what was really a subpar song.
“How do you take your tea again?” she asked.
I didn’t answer. It suddenly hit me. Richard Strauss. Ariadne auf Naxos . After they kill the Minotaur in the labyrinth, Ariadne is abandoned by Theseus on the island of Naxos; bewailing her fate, she mourns her lost love and longs for death. Three nymphs, Naiad, Dryad and Echo then announce the arrival of a stranger on the island. Ariadne thinks it’s death’s ambassador but it is in fact the god Bacchus. He falls in love with Ariadne and promises to set her in the heavens as a constellation.
I remembered the killer and his talk of labyrinths. And here we had Freddie Scavanni bidding on Richard Strauss. Was this a coincidence? He wasn’t a stupid man but, my God, there were getting to be a lot of coincidences in this case.
I stood up. “I’ve got to go to the auction. I won’t be long,” I yelled. I jogged across the harbour car park to the town hall.
The auction was over now and I found Freddie Scavanni getting help with his purchases. Loading milk crates full of records into the back of a Ford Transit van. Even on a Saturday he was wearing a suit and tie. A rather nice cashmere blue suit. A rather nice silk tie.
“Hello, Freddie,” I said.
He squinted his eyes as if trying to recall who I was.
“Sergeant Duffy, Carrick CID,” I said.
“Oh yes, of course. I meet so many people, as you can imagine.”
“Did you get the Richard Strauss?” I asked.
“No, I was outbid,” he said cheerfully. “But I got plenty of other stuff.”
“Interesting record that. Ariadne conquers the labyrinth withTheseus but then Theseus shows his gratitude by abandoning her on an island where he leaves her to die.”
Scavanni shrugged. “Well … yes. If that’s your thing, sure, great. But with that record it’s more the rarity of the recording, isn’t it?”
“Why are you in Carrick, Freddie? Do you live around here?”
“You know where I live, Sergeant Duffy. Near Straid.”
“Oh, that’s right.”
I stared at him. His smile began to falter a little.
“Is there something I can help you with, Sergeant?”
“I didn’t see you at Tommy Little’s funeral.”
He shook his head. “No. Too busy.”
“I suppose it would have been seen as a distraction. A dilution of the message in this time of great sacrifice, is that it?”
“Perhaps. I don’t really go into the politics. I just do as I’m told.”
“You didn’t go to Lucy Moore’s funeral either.”
He shook his head. “No. I read about that. We did send along a representative from Sinn Fein.”
He looked
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