On the gilded chair, Dougie’s ears pricked forward, then back again. Jean, too, heard a faint crunch of gravel. She looked through the window to see a figure muffled in a yellow raincoat walking swiftly away from Lionel Pritchard’s cottage and down the drive. Shutting the gates, as Diana had directed, would discourage the reporters. But with the pleasant village of Kinlochroy providing food, drink, and sanitary facilities, they would roost for a while, if only to justify being called away from their Hogmanay celebrations.
Jean reminded herself just as she had reminded Diana that she was a journalist, not a reporter. Either way, she needed to check with base camp. Michael and Rebecca were valuable references and moral support, but Miranda Capaldi was both Jean’s partner and her employer in the travel-and-history magazine, roles that Miranda balanced as gracefully as a fine Royal Doulton cup in its translucent saucer.
Jean pressed a number and was momentarily startled when the call was answered by a male voice: “Great Scot.”
It only seemed like midnight. In real time, the office was still open and receptionist Gavin was duly minding reception. “Hi,” Jean said. “It’s me. You mean Miranda’s making you work all the way to six p.m.?”
“Oh aye,” the lad returned. “My filing wants sorting before I’m allowed away on holiday. How are you getting on at the Misty Isle?”
“It’s misty,” Jean said. “Downright murky, even. Put me through to Miranda, please, and she can tell you all about it.”
“Righty-ho.”
A click and a buzz and Miranda’s smoke-and-honey voice answered. “Miranda Capaldi.”
“Hi. It’s me,” Jean said again.
“You’re supposed to be honeymooning, Jean.”
“No, I’m supposed to be writing a puff piece about Fergus MacDonald, advertising executive turned stately homeowner. The honeymoon doesn’t come until after the wedding.”
“Tell Alasdair that,” Miranda said with a laugh, and then her laugh trailing away into caution, “Please tell me you’re not phoning because there’s been criminal activity.”
Really, Jean thought, Miranda’s ESP was uncannier than her own, and much more useful. “I’m afraid so. An Australian visitor’s been stabbed to death on Dunasheen Beach, mere minutes after getting here. Alasdair’s in full police mode and the troops are assembling.”
“Ah,” Miranda said. “Well then. Pity.” After a suitable moment of silence, she asked, “Australian, you’re saying?”
Jean told her everything she knew, little as that was, of Greg MacLeod’s artificially shortened life: Townsville, Queensland. Clan societies and genealogy. A souvenir factory. Property. The art market. A museum of religion a la St. Mungo’s. “Although,” she concluded, “I bet his museum has another attribution, since St. Mungo is peculiar to Glasgow.”
“There’s something to be said for, say, the Woolloomooloo Museum of Religious Life and Art.”
Jean surprised herself by laughing, if shortly. “You went Down Under year before last.”
“Aye, that I did, attending a benefit in Sydney for the descendants of the Scottish masons who built the harbor bridge. Whilst I was there I spoke to several clan societies, including the MacLeods, and made the round of galleries and museums as well. The Ozzies lay on lovely receptions, all in the interest of British/Australian business and cultural relations, of course.”
“Of course,” said Jean, with a knowing nod. She heard either the soft chatter of Miranda’s keyboard or the discreet jingle of her jewelry.
“No Greg MacLeods are named in my notes, nor have I a business card on file. You’ve tried an Internet search on the man, have you?”
“If you’ll look in the next office, you’ll see my laptop sitting on my desk.”
“Oh aye. And here’s me, saying, no, you’ll not be wanting your computer, being a blushing bride and all. Half a tick.”
Jean refrained from pointing out that she and Alasdair were past the blushing stage, even though, with Jean’s fair to fish-belly-white skin, flushing was always an option.
“There’s more than a few Greg MacLeods in the world,” Miranda announced. “Here’s yours, though, in a newspaper article from last year. He sold Waltzing Matilda Gifts to Gung Hay Fat Choy International for a tidy sum, however you’re defining tidy.”
“That confirms what he told Fergie, though I don’t know why he’d lead Fergie on.”
“Here’s another bit in the same newspaper, last March. MacLeod gave a donation—another tidy sum, I reckon, or it would not be in the papers—to the Bible History Research Society for excavations in Israel.”
“That connects him with the museum.” Jean frowned—somewhere in the storage closet of her brain, the name Bible History Research Society rattled like a skeleton shifting uneasily.
“Just coming, Gavin!” called Miranda. And, back into the telephone, “Sorry, Jean, must run.”
“Fergie says I can borrow his computer,” Jean told her. “And maybe Tina MacLeod will be up to answering questions when D.C.I. Gilnockie gets here. The guy who replaced Alasdair at Inverness.”
“You’ll soon be hearing the bellow of the alpha males, then.”
This time Jean’s laugh was more of a snort, the skeptical retort of the alpha female. “Alasdair promises no territorial disputes this time around. I think he’s finally accepting he’s in another business now. And he told me Gilnockie’s a good cop.”
“You’ll be keeping me up on events, then. I’ll try asking about among my Ozzie contacts, but with the holiday and all, they’re more likely hanging about Bondi Beach than answering e-mail.”
It always seemed odd to Jean that Christmas and New Year’s were mid-summer events Down Under. But that was her own cultural bias. “Thanks. I’ll talk to you again before I see you on the second.”
“You’re still holding the wedding, then?”
“Oh.” Jean looked around the room, from the painted dragon above the mantel to the sleeping moggie on the posh chair, but neither was offering any advice.
Maybe she and Alasdair should cancel the festivities. Maybe holding a wedding under the shadow of an unsolved crime would taint their marriage. Or maybe she and her equally stubborn beloved shouldn’t let some bloody-minded person control their destiny any more than various bloody-minded people had already done.
“Jean?” Miranda asked.
“Yeah, we’re still holding the wedding.”
“That’s the spirit! Keep your pecker up, eh?”
“I should hope so.”
“It’s not too late to be organizing a release of doves. Saw it done once at a wedding in Hampshire, just lovely, off they flew into the blue sky…”
“. . . and were probably picked off by hawks. Thanks anyway, Miranda.” Jean shook her head, round-filing Miranda’s dove idea with her other ones: arriving at Dunasheen chapel in a horse-drawn carriage draped with roses, exiting while military re-enactors formed an arch of swords, champagne fountains and a cake shaped like Edinburgh Castle at the reception.
“You’ve got no taste for bells and whistles, do you now,” Miranda said sadly.
“No. And neither does Alasdair. Talk to you again soon.” Jean hit