CHAPTER THIRTY-ONE

By the time Canny finally got home after delivering Stevie Larkin safely to his original destination, Bentley was in a complete stew. The butler was acting far more like an anxious mother than Canny’s actual mother, who was swanning around the house in blissful ignorance, and he was doubtless doubly stressed by the necessity of keeping her out of the loop.

“You could have telephoned, sir,” Bentley complained, when Canny had assured him that everything was fine.

“Actually, I couldn’t,” Canny told him. “Somebody took my mobile, as well as the one they sent me, and it stopped a bullet. Lucky he was holding at the time instead of me, eh?”

The butler didn’t think that was at all amusing, and got himself caught up in an absurd internal struggle to determine the most polite way to make further enquiries. In the end, he settled for the astonishingly anodyne: “There are such things as public telephones, sir.”

“Never use them,” Canny told him, as he sank gratefully into the armchair in the drawing-room that his mother would have been using if she’d been there. “Never have any change, let alone one of those silly cards. But you’re right—I should have asked Maurice to tip you off when I dropped the money at the mill before driving Stevie to Bolton. I sort of took it for granted that he would, even though he didn’t know that you were worried, not having known that I’d been in any danger himself...sorry, I’m babbling.”

“I expect you’ve had a stressful day, sir,” the butler observed, sarcastically.

“Not one of my better ones,” Canny confessed, wondering why his heart had begun to hammer again, and why the atmosphere in the room seemed to have grown a little darker, as if fate were mocking him by saying oh, here’s a warning I forgot to give you earlier.

“But it all worked out in the end. Mr. Larkin’s knees are in perfect working order.”

“He’s fine. I ended up a hundred thou down—Euros, mercifully, not pounds—and I think I might have been drafted as a money-launderer for the Riviera mob...although that might not be such a bad thing, given that I’ll probably get the hundred thou back in no time, with abundant interest. On the other hand, it could have been a lot worse. The psychopath who wanted to kill me is safely underground, and if I’m reading between the lines with sufficient accuracy, I made a lucky guess when I told Alice Ellison to spread it around that Stevie’s on the brink of signing for Leeds United. All things considered, I guess I came out ahead of reasonable expectation. I’m truly sorry about not phoning, though. Could you possibly arrange for Securicor to pick up some bundles of cash at the mill, first thing tomorrow? They have to go back to three Leeds banks as soon as humanly possible.”

Bentley accepted the apology and promised to make the necessary arrangements—but he couldn’t resist having one last dig. “Is life going to be exciting from now on, sir?” he asked, making the prospect of excitement seem like the innermost circle of hell, in a manner that no one but a true Yorkshireman could ever have contrived.

“I don’t know,” Canny said. “History suggests that things will soon calm down, especially if I follow Daddy’s dying advice and get married—with or without your help in locating a suitably old-fashioned bride. But we’re living in the twenty-first century now, and I’m not sure that history is any longer a reliable guide to the future. For the time being, at least, I’m inclined to suspect that the excitement will get worse before it gets better—or vice versa, depending on your point of view. Do you think you’ll be able to stand it, or should I start looking for a younger man?”

“Your father communicated a few dying wishes to me, to, sir,” Bentley said, with a sigh. “He asked me to look after you, in case your devil-may-care attitude should lead you into trouble. I promised that I would do my best, circumstances permitting. I fear, therefore, that I shall have to resist any attempt to replace me with every passive-aggressive weapon known to modern psychiatry.”

“According to legend, Bentley,” Canny told him, “the devil may care. On the other hand, he might not. Either way, we all have to decide which chances to take and which to pass over. I’m not about to start passing on all but the safe ones—not yet, anyway. I’m sorry if you disapprove. Sometimes though, you take the Jeeves act just a little too far, if you don’t mind me saying so. I need to go to bed now—it’s been a long and eventful day, and even your ear-bending skills pale into insignificance by comparison with some of the abuse I’ve endured since my alarm failed to go off this morning.”

“Perhaps you forgot to set it, sir.” Bentley suggested, in a manner that almost suggested that he’d had his own copies of the library keys for many years.

“Perhaps I did,” Canny agreed.

Canny was certainly tired, but he found himself returned to that awkward condition in which mere exhaustion wasn’t nearly sufficient to carry him over the threshold of oblivion. His mind was still far too active to let go of consciousness, even if it fell into delirium. Oddly enough, though, it wasn’t the memory of looking death in the face that came back to haunt him; it was Alice Ellison’s sarcastic account of the illusions that might be born of flashes of apparent light.

At the time, he’d rejected the account, not merely because the family luck had the statistical evidence of Henri Meurdon’s computer to support it, but also because Lissa Lo had confirmed the objective reality of the streaks that lesser mortals couldn’t perceive. Now that he was in reduced mental circumstances, though, doubt began to nibble away at both convictions.

How often had he played roulette or chemin de fer, rather than poker, in Meurdon’s casino? And how often had he played more than one game in the course of a single twelve- or sixteen-hour session? Given that the only thing Meurdon could conveniently tabulate was the record of the chips that he bought and cashed in, how could Meurdon know that his winnings were as consistent in games of chance as they were in games of skill? Wasn’t it possible—probable, even—that Meurdon had been reading more into the figures than could be legitimately deduced, perhaps because he wanted to be convinced himself that luck really did exist, and could be tamed?

Then again, how much did Lissa Lo’s claims really amount to, even if they were honest? She saw streaks when he saw flashes, but how could either of them know that they were the same streaks? More importantly, how could either of them know, given that the streaks coincided with similar events, that the flashes of light and clouds of darkness were not reflexive physiological responses to similar circumstances and similar anticipations? They had both seen streaks when zero came up on Meurdon’s wheel, while Stevie Larkin and the other players had apparently remained oblivious to any deconstruction of the moment, but might that only mean that they had similar nEurological disorders, likely to react to surges of excitement—or surges of anxiety—in the same pathological fashion?

Might Alice, in fact, be right? Might the Kilcannon gift, and other gifts like it, be nothing more than a concatenation of exotic symptoms produced by nEuronal weak spots in brains under stress: moments of literal enlightenment, in which the uninvolved but ever-watchful rational mind could not help but look for patterns and meanings...and which might indeed have a genetic basis transmissible from father to son, even for thirty generations and more.

But the numbers can’t lie, he told himself, over and over again, as his mind struggled to let go of the continuity of waking thought. Everything else can, and probably does, but the numbers can’t. No matter how much psychological arithmetic might differ from the real thing, money in the bank is real. We do win. The percentage is there. Either the devil cares, or our lucky star keeps right on shining. One way or the other, we’ve always been ahead of the herd.

He knew, though, that he was trying harder to convince himself than he had ever had to do before—and harder by far than he had ever tried to convince himself of the opposite conclusion.

There had been times aplenty when he had lain awake telling himself that it as all mumbo-jumbo, all tomfoolery, all superstition—but never on a day when he had been within seconds of getting wasted by a sub-machine gun.

On a day like that, anyone would cling with all his might to the faith that he really did have an edge over the laws of chance, and that fate really was looking out for him, forever moving in mysterious ways to protect him from harm.

In the morning he rang Maurice Rawtenstall with exact instructions as to how the cash he’d brought back from his excursion was to be redistributed. Then he rang Henri Meurdon.

“I just wanted to say thanks, Henri,” He said. “Your friends came through for me. It was tight, but they’ve tidied everything up.”

It was an hour later in Monte Carlo than in England, but the casino manager kept strange hours, and the call had obviously woken him up. “Don’t thank me, Monsieur Kilcannon...Lord Credesdale,” he said. “I did nothing. I am glad to know that it worked out well.”

“As well as could be expected,” Canny corrected him. “I can see now why you approved of my pattern of play. My attitude and style seem to fit in very well with the general ambiance of your operation.”

“I am merely an employee, Mons...Lord Credesdale.”

“There’s nothing mere about you, Henri. May I ask you something?”

“Of course.”

“How many others did you find, when your computer churned out its results?”

There was a pause at the other end while Meurdon collected himself. “I am sorry, Lord Credesdale,” he said, eventually. “I cannot tell you that. I am neither a doctor nor a lawyer, but even so...I am bound by duty to keep certain information confidential. I am sure that you understand.”

Canny understood the careful implication that if anyone else were to ask, Meurdon would not be giving away any information about him—except, of course, that “anyone” didn’t mean anyone in an absolute sense. Canny was protected now, by people who thought that he was worth protecting—a category that obviously extended far beyond a faithful butler and a curious supermodel.

“I think I understand a little better than I did before,” Canny agreed. “I think I understand, for instance, why you egged me on to take that seat at your roulette table, although it wasn’t a dare. I understand curiosity, and its corollaries—and I really do understand. I certainly don’t hold it against you. The casino business is built on the vagaries of psychological probability. It’s essentially predatory, feeding on false beliefs and true ones alike. It’s the business we Kilcannons have been in since time immemorial. I like your style too, Henri, and your attitude to the news your computers deliver. If you find that there are loaded dice out there, and you don’t have a set yourself, the logical move to make is to find the guys who do and bet on them. I wish you the best of luck, Henri—I really do.”

“The sentiment is mutual, Lord Credesdale. Shall we be seeing you at the casino again in the future? You are, as you know, always welcome.”

“Thanks. Maybe next year. For the time being, I have other business to attend to. I need to get a much firmer grip on the reins of Daddy’s affairs, not just to steer them through the inevitable disruption caused by his death but to make sure that everyone knows that I’m in charge, and that the whole enterprise is in safe hands. It’s not the work of a few days, or even a year. When a man in Daddy’s position dies, there are always complications—and when a man like me steps into his shoes, there’s a certain amount of wearing in to be done.”

“I understand, Lord Credesdale,” Meurdon said. “We shall be delighted to see you again, when you have time to spare for leisure. I shall always be glad to be of service.”

When he’d rung off, Canny thought that it might be well worth traveling down to the Riviera again, when he could spare to time, to have a quiet chat with Henri Meurdon about the mysteries of probability—but he decided, on due reflection, that it would probably be pointless. Meurdon was a practical man, not a theorist. Asked about matters of causation and metaphysical significance he would simply shrug his shoulders in his stylish Gallic fashion, and suggest that it might be better not to trouble one’s mind with such issues.

From a casino manager’s point of view, it was enough to know that a pattern existed, and to follow it as long as it held—and, doubtless, to be ready to abandon it the moment it disintegrated and dissolved into the chaos of chance—but Canny’s needs were greater than that.

Lissa’s right, he thought, as he began compiling his timetable for the day. There’s only one way to find out where the limitations are, and that’s to test them. And that’s why Alice is wrong—it really isn’t Lissa’s body that had me hypnotized; it’s her courage and determination. When all appearances are set aside, we’re two of a kind.