When they were in O’Reilly’s car and he started the engine, he turned to her and said, ‘You’ve made a wise decision.’
‘The decision wasn’t mine.’ She sounded curt but that was fine with her.
He steered from Tony’s driveway and set out for the downhill drive. ‘Harrison knew you were just being a loyal friend. He helped you do what you knew you should.’
She didn’t answer. What Tony had said hurt. But leaving him like that hurt more. As soon as she could, she would call him. And she’d make sure she saw him within hours.
Bogie sat on her lap and stared straight at the detective. His little body was rigid. He’d made it clear he wasn’t interested in coming back out into the icy night.
If she let the man goad her, she’d lose her temper. That could be exactly what he wanted. Out of control people often talked too much. She let it go, closed her eyes and pretended to rest – not that he’d be fooled.
What felt like an interminable time later they drew to a stop and Alex saw they were in front of Corner Cottage.
‘I’d appreciate having that lace, now,’ he said. ‘It’s late, sure enough, but it would be a good thing if we could talk some more. Just the two of us.’
She shrugged and got out of the car with Bogie in her arms. O’Reilly managed to reach the gate in time to hold it for her.
Lily opened the door before Alex could knock and she raised her brows. She obviously hadn’t expected to see her daughter, and certainly not the detective.
‘Detective Inspector O’Reilly drove me down, Mum. He wants to ask me a few more questions.’ He wouldn’t see how she wrinkled her nose with distaste for her mum’s benefit.
‘I was just off to bed,’ Lily said. ‘I’ll leave you to it, then. Unless the detective has questions for me, too.’
‘Not at the moment, thank you, madam,’ O’Reilly said, excruciatingly polite.
Lily took Bogie from Alex. ‘I’ll put him on your bed,’ she said and went quickly upstairs.
‘In here, please,’ Alex said, opening the door to the tiny front sitting room for O’Reilly. ‘I’ll get that material.’
When she returned from the kitchen where she’d put the folded tissue in a drawer reserved for manuals they never used, O’Reilly was looking carefully at one of her mother’s much-loved pieces of Belleek porcelain – the shapes of two fish formed into a pale lemon vase.
‘This is an old one,’ he said. ‘Back in County Wicklow my own mother has a glass-fronted cabinet filled with little pieces. She says it’s patriotic for the Irish to collect Belleek. Do you know why they started making it?’
She didn’t, but she did recognize a tiny alarm. O’Reilly wasn’t above using a tried and tested method to get her to relax with him. Chatter about simple, unthreatening interests could do wonders to break social ice.
‘Y’don’t, do you?’ And now he really sounded Irish. ‘It was a brainchild to get some people work after the potato famine. Too bad it took so long to get going, but it happened in the end. You can see through the stuff. I used to sneak a bit and look at it in the light.’ He held the vase to a nearby lamp to show how transparent it was.
‘Pretty,’ she said. ‘Mum’s been buying bits and bobs since I was little. I hope you never broke anything at home.’
‘Aw, no. I’m still here, aren’t I?’ He laughed, and looked young and appealing.
O’Reilly, giving her an open and so charming smile, could have swept her into his cozy corner. But this wasn’t the night for cozy anything.
‘Here’s what you’re looking for.’ The simple hospitality her mother would have expected shamed her into adding: ‘Can I offer you something? There’s Glenlivet unless you’ve an aversion to Scots whiskey. Or tell me your poison and I’ll see what I can do.’
‘Glenlivet will do nicely,’ he said and grinned again, pulling on a pair of blue latex gloves. ‘I’ll count myself not officially on duty.’ He sat at the end of the small damask-covered sofa to unwrap her tissue packet.
She poured the amber Scotch into two glasses, her own just a half finger. O’Reilly got half a glass. She needed all the help she could get.
When she was seated across from him he took a healthy swallow and set the drink aside. The tissue he spread open on his thigh before gently straightening the lace-edged lawn.
Satisfaction. It gleamed in his dark eyes when he looked up at her. ‘Have you a magnifying glass? No bother if you don’t.’
‘I do,’ she said, knowing instinctively that somehow he had already learned about the initials.
The glass was in Lily’s sewing basket. Holding it close to the specimen, O’Reilly didn’t make a sound, but this was one time when his face didn’t don his practiced blank expression quickly enough.
Alex wanted to ask what it meant to him but passed her whiskey back and forth under her nose instead and watched intently.
Finally he sat back and there was nothing of the smile left. She got the full force of how cold he could appear.
‘There’s been a lot of violence in this village,’ he said abruptly. ‘Far more than most think we’re looking into. Do you understand what I’m talking about?’
So much for Belleek. ‘No, I don’t.’
‘Well then, Alex, what do you know about this little lace exhibit, other than where it came from? We’ve been looking for it, by the way – to complete the whole piece. We’ve got the rest of it.’
The less squirrely she appeared, the better. ‘It was inside the cincture, wasn’t it? When I cut it I must have cut through that, too, and caught a little bit on the edge of the knife.’
He looked at her for a long time but she wouldn’t let her eyes move from his. ‘Didn’t you have to pull this off the knife? You could have given them both to me at the same time.’
‘No, I couldn’t.’
Again the extended stare. ‘We can go into the station and do this as officially as I should. I thought we could be friendly about it but I expect you’d prefer to have your solicitor with you.’
Her stomach flipped, just as he’d intended. She crossed her arms and gave him back some of his own silence.
‘All right. Is there anything you think you want to tell me? About anything?’
Thinking, turning over possibilities of what he did and didn’t know and what he wanted her to say, she looked at her hands in her lap. If she could make him feel she wanted to help him – not that she didn’t, but she would not drag dear friends into this. She could help without harming, couldn’t she?
When he moved she thought he was getting up, but he picked up his Scotch again and savored another mouthful.
‘There’s an old story in the area,’ she told him hesitantly. She could mess this up so easily. ‘About a bride’s handkerchief being placed in her coffin after she died. That would be some years after her wedding. Have you heard anything about it?’
She heard the breath he took in through his nose, slowly. ‘Something. Yes, I’m thinking I did.’
‘It’s probably just a silly tale that’s hung around for years. You know how those things go in places like this.’
‘A bride’s handkerchief? Like this one?’ He set a forefinger on the tissue.
‘So you think that’s what it is?’ Her chest bumped hard.
‘Do you?’ he asked.
‘Could be.’
‘How do you think it came to be inside Brother Percy’s cincture?’
She frowned at him.
O’Reilly didn’t blink. ‘Doesn’t make any sense, does it? But if that were, say, a handkerchief that belonged to Cornelius Derwinter’s wife and it was put in her coffin? Who took it out?’
‘Edward Derwinter?’
O’Reilly leaned toward her. He didn’t look tired any more. ‘That’s the story you heard, is it? Did you hear it a long time ago, like some kiddies’ ghost story? Or is this being talked about now?’
When she didn’t answer, he went on: ‘Are they saying something happened to Edward Derwinter because of this?’ That steady forefinger remained on the tissue paper – beside the handkerchief scrap. ‘Concentrate. Did they do something to the boy that could have a bearing on this case?’
Alex stood abruptly and jerked her arm, forgetting the Scotch. Droplets of pale gold liquid arced through the lamplight and glittered as they fell.
‘What?’ O’Reilly said, scrambling to get up and protect his precious evidence at the same time.
‘Was Brother Percy … no, I was thinking for a second that Percy was actually Edward. That’s not right. But Percy was wearing Edward’s cincture. He said he had something he wanted to give back to him.’