Chapter 16

All travel has its advantages

Mirabelle was stirred from her meditative state later that afternoon by Billy Randall entering his kitchen to cut a slice of bread and spread it thickly with butter. Vi had still not returned. He chewed and swallowed as he stood at the sink, filling his belly in a workmanlike fashion. Then he straightened his tie. There was something about the movement that made her realise he was readying himself to go out. Mirabelle got to her feet and sneaked back on to the street down the side of the Quinns’ house. Mrs Ambrose’s curtains twitched as she loitered by an apple tree covered in blossom so she raised her hand in a cheery greeting – she didn’t want to be accused of sneaking around. The curtain fell back into place. Then, sure enough, Billy left the house and began to walk down the road. Mirabelle fell into step behind him, carefully keeping her distance. Tailing someone in the suburbs was tricky. The streets were quiet and strangers stood out. On the plus side, men’s hats restricted their field of vision. Mirabelle hung back and watched Billy turn on to the main road. The Sunday service meant that buses were few and far between and he didn’t loiter at the stop, instead striding towards town past the shuttered shops. The pavements felt too wide without the outdoor displays at the grocery and the florist. Billy checked his watch. He must be meeting someone.

Further towards town, the sun came out and he opened his coat. A car drove past, the first Mirabelle had seen on the road – two young children peered out of the back window, one with a smear of chocolate on her face. A family outing. Could Billy Randall have committed the murder? Could he? He was the one who’d found her body. He had been there that night – all night. Had he had an affair with Helen Quinn? It hardly seemed the kind of thing you’d get away with on Mill Lane, but people did fall in love. It happened all the time. And he was behaving erratically.

As she kept her distance, Mirabelle was so busy running through the possibilities that Billy Randall’s destination took her by surprise as he cut into Brighton Railway Station by the side entrance, crossed the plaza, bought a ticket and headed for the London platform. There were regular trains to the capital, even on a Sunday. Today, there was a gaggle of women who had clearly enjoyed a day out by the seaside, early though it was for tourists. Two of them were holding prizes won at stalls on the pier – a toy bear and a jar of Brighton rock. Periodically, they hooted with laughter, almost like gulls. Billy Randall took a seat on a bench, checking his watch once more. It wasn’t an appointment he was heading for, Mirabelle realised, it was a departure time. Billy was going up to town. The Randalls had moved down from London, she recalled. They had come to Vi’s hometown to build what she’d called ‘a new life’. Perhaps Billy hadn’t given up his old one.

There was nothing for it. Mirabelle bought a ticket and, using the tourists as a screen, she stood further up the platform as the train chugged in.

Victoria Railway Station was busy when she stepped off at the other end, carefully keeping Billy in her sights. The smell of frying bacon emanated from the station café. Mirabelle felt her stomach growl but she ignored it. It was almost seven o’clock as Billy Randall passed underneath the huge station clock and she tailed him to the main road. He paused to light a cigarette and then crossed in the direction of Belgravia. It was always easier to blend in somehow in London. There were simply more people. Careful not to be noticed, Mirabelle followed Billy in the direction of Ebury Street where he disappeared through the doorway of a pub. Mirabelle bit her lip. She couldn’t go in. If he recognised her she’d have wasted her time. On tiptoes, she peered over the frosted glass of the window, through a clear, thin strip that afforded a view. Randall ordered a half-pint of bitter and sipped it standing at the bar. There were no women inside and Mirabelle couldn’t make out a snug. She laid a hand on the cool stucco as she took in the rest of the street. She wouldn’t be able to stand here for long. A woman hanging around outside a public house was easily spotted. Vi Randall was right – following your husband into the pub was undignified and that’s what people would assume she was doing. There was a small hotel over the road, its dining room overlooking the street, so she turned on her heel and went inside.

The place smelled pleasantly of toast. A solicitous waitress in black and white guided Mirabelle to a table by the window. ‘I do so like being able to see people go by,’ Mirabelle said lightly.

‘On your own, madam?’

This phrase was a judgement and Mirabelle knew it. ‘Yes,’ she said, ordering a pot of tea and a pork chop. A man sitting at a table near the fireplace smiled weakly in her direction, but Mirabelle ignored him, keeping her eyes on the street. It had been a long time since breakfast and she was hungry. Maybe this was for the best, and, besides, if Billy Randall emerged, she could leave money to cover the bill. The waitress disappeared through a swing door to the clatter of crockery being assembled. Across the road, the pub seemed quiet. A man went in with a dog on a lead and another came out and turned on to Eccleston Street. As the sky darkened, the dim pub lights glowed through the opaque glass. When it was served, Mirabelle poured her tea and ate the pork chop. It was a meal best approached with a sense of purpose. The chop had the texture of felt and the vegetables were overboiled. Still, it was warm and it filled her up. She checked her watch as she finished.

‘Pudding?’ the waitress offered. ‘There’s spotted dick.’

Mirabelle considered. Heaven knows what culinary horror the hotel’s cook might be able to unleash on raisins, flour and suet. ‘There’s custard,’ the waitress added.

‘Thank you. That was quite enough.’

The girl went to fetch the bill and Mirabelle kept her eye on the view. It was after half past seven now, nearer eight, and Belgravia was quiet, the chimney stacks smoking. Most residents would have spent the weekend in the country. Now and then, a car passed – latecomers returning to town in time for dinner. Mirabelle paid, leaving a small tip, and resumed her place outside by the strip of clear glass. Billy Randall had left his spot at the bar. She checked the few seats she could see to the side but he hadn’t settled there. She waited. Perhaps he had gone to the lavatory. After five minutes there was still no sign. Mirabelle felt frustrated. This whole case was annoying, somehow – there were too many clues, they seemed to lead nowhere and she could imagine no motive to justify Helen Quinn’s murder or Phil Quinn’s incarceration. She checked once more on tiptoes, but there was no sign of Billy. Slowly, she took a deep breath and opened the bar door, aware that as she did so, the eyes of everyone inside fell upon her.

‘No women,’ the barman growled.

‘I’m looking for someone. Billy Randall. He came in almost an hour ago. Brown coat? Aged about thirty? He ordered bitter.’

The barman leaned forwards. ‘I don’t know who you mean, love.’

‘He was standing right there.’ Mirabelle indicated the place she’d seen Billy leaning against the bar.

‘Sorry, love. No women.’

Mirabelle ignored him. She walked towards the exit to the privy. ‘Oi!’ the barman objected. ‘You can’t go out there.’

Two men chortled as Mirabelle speeded up. ‘She’s a harridan all right,’ someone said loudly and there was a murmur of agreement. But it didn’t stop her. Outside, the privy door lay open and there was no sign of Billy Randall. Behind it, the back gate was closed. Mirabelle turned the handle. It opened on to a mews. She looked both ways. It was getting darker and the laneway was not well lit so it was difficult to make out what lay further along. As far as she could see, it was absolutely still. Mirabelle cursed silently – he must have left this way while she was just sitting there, eating that horrible meal. He could be anywhere by now. Had he seen her? she wondered. She’d been so careful. Burly, in an apron with a cloth tucked at the belt, the barman burst out of the back door. He was furious, ready for some kind of fight, with his sleeves rolled up. ‘Look, love, you can’t just steam out here. Your fellow’s got a right to privacy. He won’t appreciate . . .’

‘Have you seen him before? Has he been here before?’

The barman shrugged. Even in the half-light his face looked flushed.

‘Look,’ Mirabelle explained, ‘he’s not my husband.’

‘What then?’

‘Police.’

The barman laughed. ‘You’re a copper? Come on, love.’ He eyed her, lingering on her shoes. ‘Special Branch is it?’ he snorted. ‘Set up a ladies’ division, have they?’

Mirabelle kept her gaze steady. ‘Has he been here before or not?’

The barman relented. You never could tell what women might get up to these days. ‘He was in yesterday,’ he said. ‘I never saw him before that.’

‘Same time?’

‘More or less. It’s none of your business.’

‘Did he leave this way yesterday too?’ The barman kept his mouth shut so Mirabelle repeated the question. ‘Did he leave this way yesterday?’

The man relented once more. ‘Yeah. Some fellows just like a bit of intrigue. He paid his tab all right. What do I care?’

Mirabelle considered. Billy was certainly being prudent. It was an old trick to use a bar or café that way. During the war they’d called this kind of place ‘a portal’. Agents had navigated their routes entering by one door, leaving by another, building in routine dodges to guard against detection. She cursed herself for not watching closely enough. Now she’d never find out what on earth he was up to. At least, she figured, it was less likely Billy knew she’d followed him if he’d come in the front entrance and out the back one the day before. At least there was that. ‘You go in and tell them you saw me off,’ she said generously. ‘Tell them it was a cheek and you threw me out on my ear.’

‘Quite right. You can’t come into a public house and disturb everyone.’

There was no point in fighting about it. ‘All right,’ she said.

The man blustered. ‘Really,’ he muttered but he went back inside.

The backyard fell silent and Mirabelle closed the gate behind her and stalked along the cobbles just as Billy must have done half an hour or more before. There was no point berating herself. He was long gone. A thousand agents had fallen for this old trick – she’d just be more careful next time. She checked her watch, recalling there was another lead she could follow up. It was Sunday night, after all, and she’d been invited to a party.