Payment in Blood - By Elizabeth George Page 0,46

at last from their day's confi nement in the library, most of the group were still in the entrance hall when Lynley asked Joanna Ellacourt to step into the sitting room. His request, made so soon after his interview with her husband, reduced the small cluster of people to breath-holding suspense, as if they were waiting to see how the actress would respond. It was, after all, couched as a request. But none of them were foolish enough to believe that it was an invitation that might be politely rebuffed should Joanna choose to do so.

It looked as if she was considering that as a possibility, however, walking a quick line between outright refusal and hostile cooperation. The latter seemed ascendant, and as she approached the sitting-room door, Joanna gave vent to the umbrage she felt after a day of incarceration by favouring neither Lynley nor Havers with so much as a word before she passed in front of them and took a seat of her own choosing, the ladder-back chair by the fire that Sydeham had avoided and Stinhurst had only reluctantly occupied. Her choice of it was intriguing, revealing either a determination to see the interview through in the most forthright manner possible or a desire to choose a location where the benefits of fi relight playing upon her skin and hair might distract an idle watcher at a crucial moment. Joanna Ellacourt knew how to play to an audience.

Looking at her, Lynley found it hard to believe that she was nearly forty years old. She looked ten years younger, possibly more, and in the forgiving light of the fire that warmed her skin to a translucent gold, Lynley found himself recalling his first sight of François Boucher's Diana Resting, for the splendid glow of Joanna's skin was the same, as were the delicate shades of colour across her cheeks and the fragile curve of her ear when she shook her hair back. She was absolutely beautiful, and had her eyes been brown instead of cornfl ower blue, she might herself have posed for Boucher's painting.

No wonder Gabriel's been after her, Lynley thought. He offered her a cigarette which she accepted. Her hand closed over his to steady the lighter's flame with fingers that were long, very cool, flashing several diamond rings. It was a stagey sort of movement, intentionally seductive.

"Why did you argue with your husband last night?" he asked.

Joanna raised a well-shaped eyebrow and spent a moment taking in Sergeant Havers from head to toe, as if in an evaluation of the policewoman's grubby skirt and sootstained sweater. "Because I'd grown tired of being on the receiving end of Robert Gabriel's lust for the last six months," she replied frankly, and paused as if in the expectation of a response- a nod of sympathy, perhaps, or a cluck of disapproval. When it became evident that none was forthcoming, she was forced to continue her story. Which she did, her voice a bit tight. "He had a nice hard-on every night in my last scene in Othello, Inspector. Just about the time he was supposed to smother me, he'd begin squirming about on the bed like a pubescent twelve-year-old who's just discovered how much fun he can have with that sweet little sausage between his legs. I'd had it with him. I thought David understood as much. But apparently he didn't. So he arranged a new contract, forcing me to work with Gabriel again."

"You argued about the new play."

"We argued about everything. The new play was just part of it."

"And you objected to Irene Sinclair's role as well."

Joanna flicked cigarette ash onto the hearth. "As far as I was concerned, my husband couldn't have manipulated this affair with more resounding idiocy. He put me in the position of having to fight off Robert Gabriel for the next twelve months at the same time as trying to keep Gabriel's ex-wife from climbing up my back on the way to her new, superlunary career. I won't lie to you, Inspector. I'm not at all sorry that this play of Joy's is fi nished. You may say that's an open admission of guilt if you like, but I'm not about to sit here and play the mourner over the death of a woman I scarcely knew. I suppose that gives me a motive to kill her, as well. But I can't help that."

"Your husband says that you were out of your room for part of last night."

"So I had the

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