Career of Evil (Cormoran Strike #3)(8)
“Did you put him in prison?”
“No,” said Strike.
His expression had become forbidding. Robin waited, but she could tell nothing more was coming on Brockbank, so she asked:
“And the other one?”
This time Strike did not answer at all. She thought he had not heard her.
“Who’s—?”
“I don’t want to talk about it,” grunted Strike.
He glowered into his fresh pint, but Robin refused to be intimidated.
“Whoever sent that leg,” she said, “sent it to me.”
“All right,” said Strike grudgingly, after a brief hesitation. “His name’s Jeff Whittaker.”
Robin felt a thrill of shock. She did not need to ask how Strike knew Jeff Whittaker. She already knew, although they had never discussed him.
Cormoran Strike’s early life was documented on the internet and it had been endlessly rehashed by the extensive press coverage of his detective triumphs. He was the illegitimate and unplanned offspring of a rock star and a woman always described as a supergroupie, a woman who had died of an overdose when Strike was twenty. Jeff Whittaker had been her much younger second husband, who had been accused and acquitted of her murder.
They sat in silence until their food arrived.
“Why are you only having a salad? Aren’t you hungry?” asked Strike, clearing his plate of chips. As Robin had suspected, his mood had improved with the ingestion of carbohydrates.
“Wedding,” said Robin shortly.
Strike said nothing. Comments on her figure fell strictly outside the self-imposed boundaries he had established for their relationship, which he had determined from the outset must never become too intimate. Nevertheless, he thought she was becoming too thin. In his opinion (and even the thought fell outside those same boundaries), she looked better curvier.
“Aren’t you even going to tell me,” Robin asked, after several more minutes’ silence, “what your connection with that song is?”
He chewed for a while, drank more beer, ordered another pint of Doom Bar then said, “My mother had the title tattooed on her.”
He did not fancy telling Robin exactly where the tattoo had been. He preferred not to think about that. However, he was mellowing with food and drink: Robin had never showed prurient interest in his past and he supposed she was justified in a request for information today.
“It was her favorite song. Blue ?yster Cult were her favorite band. Well, ‘favorite’ is an understatement. Obsession, really.”
“Her favorite wasn’t the Deadbeats?” asked Robin, without thinking. Strike’s father was the lead singer of the Deadbeats. They had never discussed him, either.
“No,” said Strike, managing a half-smile. “Old Jonny came a poor second with Leda. She wanted Eric Bloom, lead singer of Blue ?yster Cult, but she never got him. One of the very few who got away.”
Robin was not sure what to say. She had wondered before what it felt like to have your mother’s epic sexual history online for anybody to see. Strike’s fresh pint arrived and he took a swig before continuing.
“I was nearly christened Eric Bloom Strike,” he said and Robin choked on her water. He laughed as she coughed into a napkin. “Let’s face it, Cormoran’s not much bloody better. Cormoran Blue—”
“Blue?”
“Blue ?yster Cult, aren’t you listening?”
“God,” said Robin. “You keep that quiet.”
“Wouldn’t you?”
“What does it mean, ‘Mistress of the Salmon Salt’?”
“Search me. Their lyrics are insane. Science fiction. Crazy stuff.”
A voice in his head: She wanted to die. She was the quicklime girl.
He drank more beer.
“I don’t think I’ve ever heard any Blue ?yster Cult,” said Robin.
“Yeah, you have,” Strike contradicted her. “‘Don’t Fear the Reaper.’”
“Don’t—what?”
“It was a monster hit for them. ‘Don’t Fear the Reaper.’”
“Oh, I—I see.”
For one startled moment, Robin had thought that he was giving her advice.
They ate in silence for a while until Robin, unable to keep the question down any longer, though hoping she did not sound scared, asked:
“Why do you think the leg was addressed to me?”
Strike had already had time to ponder this question.
“I’ve been wondering that,” he said, “and I think we’ve got to consider it a tacit threat, so, until we’ve found out—”
“I’m not stopping work,” said Robin fiercely. “I’m not staying at home. That’s what Matthew wants.”
“You’ve spoken to him, have you?”
She had made the call while Strike was downstairs with Wardle.
“Yes. He’s angry with me for signing for it.”
“I expect he’s worried about you,” said Strike insincerely. He had met Matthew on a handful of occasions and disliked him more each time.
“He’s not worried,” snapped Robin. “He just thinks that this is it, that I’ll have to leave now, that I’ll be scared out. I won’t.”