Maybe it’s his real name. Maybe it isn’t. Maybe she was lying. I found nothing at Griscti’s. I’ll try the other outfitters today.”
“Maybe I can help?”
“Of course you can. But be careful who you speak to.”
Busuttil had paid two visits to the Blue Parrot, neither of which had revealed anything of note regarding Carmela Cassar. The other girls she’d worked with had painted a picture of a scrupulously moral young woman who had never associated with clients outside the confines of the club. This didn’t mean there wasn’t more to discover on that front; he’d ascertained that the club was popular with officers from the submarine flotilla. He also intended to pay a visit to Carmela’s parents. He stood a better chance of extracting something from them, which, given the hopeless failure of Max’s visit, wasn’t saying much.
Max had nothing much to offer Busuttil in return besides Freddie’s theory that the killer was left-handed.
“Interesting,” said Busuttil, before adding, “Tell me about Freddie.”
“Freddie?”
“Tell me about him.”
“Why?”
“Because everything starts with him. He tells you. You tell Lilian. She tells me. The story grows. Maybe that’s what he wants. Who do I tell?”
“No one, I hope, until you know exactly what’s going on,” replied Max firmly.
“You never know exactly. What makes a man kill? I don’t know. Do you?”
“I know you’re barking up the wrong tree with Freddie.”
Busuttil shrugged. “I’m very suspicious. I have even asked myself if it is you.”
“Well, it isn’t me.”
It was a slightly sour note on which to end. Busuttil suggested that they meet again at ten o’clock that night to pool their findings, and then he disappeared into the new day.
Pemberton was waiting for Max when he got to work, bursting with barely concealed excitement, although he waited till they were alone before spilling the beans.
“The governor’s gone.”
“Gone?”
“Last night. From Kalafrana. Left in a seaplane.”
It was good to know that Elliott wasn’t a total fraud.
“Why are you whispering?” whispered Max.
Pemberton looked crestfallen. “You knew?”
“I got a whiff of it.”
Keep it cryptic, keep the new boy in his place, then find out how the hell the new boy got the jump on him.
“Who did you hear it from?”
“Rosamund, who heard it from Hugh. Apparently he’s known for a couple of days. She was very upset.”
Rosamund had shown up at breakfast at the Copnalls’ house in Saint Julian’s, where Pemberton was lodging. If she was to be believed, the governor of Gibraltar, Lord Gort, was now the governor of Malta, having flown in to Kalafrana on the same seaplane that had then carried the Dobbies off.
Gort was a good man, by all accounts—a tough no-nonsense type—and Rosamund would get over it once she’d secured a place for herself at the new court.
It wasn’t long before the call came through from the lieutenant governor’s office, as Max knew it would. He wandered next door to the Vincenzo Bugeja Conservatory, pushing aside memories of his last visit.
The sight of Hodges perched self-importantly behind his desk brought them flooding back.
“It’s good to see you again, Major Chadwick.”
A pointed comment intended to go over the heads of the other men already gathered there, waiting to be called through. They were standing in a loose huddle, smoking and talking in hushed tones. Max nosed his way among them. There were representatives from Defense Security and Censorship, along with a couple of faces he recognized from the Union Club.
“Heard the news, old man?”
“About Dobbie?”
“Damn shame, if you ask me.”
“Straight out of left field. Didn’t even say goodbye.”
“He’s been poorly for a while.”
“Yes, a bad case of ‘Et tu, Brute?’ from what I hear.”
“Really?”
“Methinks Mabel has been up to her old tricks.”
Mabel Strickland was the editor of the Times of Malta, and a force to be reckoned with. It was well known that her influence extended far beyond the shores of Malta to the corridors of Whitehall.
“Oh goody, a scandal. We haven’t had one of those for a while.”
If you only knew, thought Max.
He stayed well out of the was-he-pushed-or-did-he-jump speculation that followed, which was soon interrupted by the appearance of Colonel Gifford, who summoned them through.
The lieutenant governor rose from his desk to greet them. Despite the suntan, his face appeared drawn and careworn. He didn’t hang about, confirming that Lord Gort was indeed the new governor and commander in chief. In the fullness of time they would all have a chance to meet him, but right then he had his head down with the service chiefs, poring over the preparations for the forthcoming battle. The