But Lazaros and his band of merry men turned up before Mitzi did. They set up at a bar table and took our formal statements in chronological order: the chambermaid finding him, Sergeant Papa confirming the finding, me arriving to reconfirm andtell Papa, to get his finger out and into a telephone dial.
When I'd finished, I asked Lazaros: 'Was it cancer?'
He thought for a moment before answering. His shirt was clean now, but his long face still looked weary. 'Yes. The patho-logist's preliminary report says it was well advanced.'
'So now we know.'
'Yes. Read the statement over, please, and sign if it is correct.'
Mitzi got back from wherever as I was reading, and Lazaros called her in. She was smartly but quietly dressed in a mid-length charcoal grey skirt, short-sleeved white blouse and what looked like a small antique gold coin on a chain around her neck. She gave me a polite, pale smile as we passed in the doorway.
Ken was leaning on the counter outside; Lazaros hadn't wanted anything formal from him. 'Half past eleven. When's it respectable to start drinking in this town?'
'When the cops are out of the bar. It's an old Cypriot custom.'
'I was thinking more of strolling round to the Ledra.'
'Well, unless you do it for the exercise, stop thinking. We're busted after last night. We can't pay for what we drink so we'll have to drink it here.'
Kapotas came out of the office in time to get the tail-end of that, and glared at me. 'It is all being charged in the end! '
'Sooner or later it's going to get cheaper to pay me and let me fly home.'
He waved a piece of paper. 'I can do nothing until Harborne, Gough tell me… And what about the Professor? Will his daughter be able to pay? All that champagne and caviar! '
'Delicious it was, too,' I said, just to cheer him up. Then, to Ken: 'How was the Professor fixed, moneywise?'
He shrugged. 'Middling well, I'd guess. He didn't talk about it, but I'd say he was used to living well.'
'He'd had a year without income.'
True, true…'
A woman came up to the desk and said in an American accent: 'Good morning. Is this where Professor Bruno Spohr was staying?"
We all looked at her. After a moment, Kapotas said nervously: 'I am afraid the Professor is-'
'I know all about that. But I think he had his daughter with him; I was wondering if I could talk with her.'
I nodded at the bar doors. 'She's making a statement to the police in there, but she shouldn't be long.'
'Why, thank you. I'm Eleanor Travis.' And she held out a firm, slim hand.
She must have been about thirty-five, slim and a bit tall and with a general air of tautness. Something in the way the skin was pulled tight over the high suntanned cheekbones, the way she cocked her head and smiled, showing a lot of big white teeth, the cat-like precision with which she moved. Her hair was longish and blonde and a little likely to separate into straggles; she wore tight blue trousers – and had a bottom small enough for it – a blue denim shirt and a bright yellow silk neckscarf.
I said: 'Roy Case. And this is Ken Caviti.' She shook his hand, too.
Then he asked: 'Did you know Professor Spohr?'
'I never met him, no, but I've heard a lot about him."
'Oh?'
'I work for the Met in New York.'
"The which?'
'Metropolitan Museum of Art. I'm a medievalist.'
I said: 'Forgive me asking – but how did you know where the Professor was?'
Her whole body tautened another notch. But the smile stayed. 'It was on the radio this morning, the desk at the Ledra told me. I'd tried ringing him at a dozen hotels yesterday – including this one – and they'd all said he wasn't staying.'
Ken and I glanced at each other and he nodded about a millimetre. It sounded reasonable.
I said: 'He was trying to stay secret. I imagine a hotel guest is entitled to that. I suppose you didn't-' But then I said: 'Skip it.' I'd been going to ask if she'd played games with delivering those green envelopes all over town, but if she had she certainly wouldn't admit it.
Ken said. 'You really are from the Met, are you?'
This time the smile was long gone. Kapotas stood up straight and made worried twittering noises.
She said coolly: 'And who are you two?'
'He's an old friend of the Prof's,' I said quickly, 'and I'm an old friend of him. Sorry if we sound snoopy, but a man doesn't commit suicide every day.'
'I'd guess once is the most anybody ever did.' Her voice was quite calm. She reached into a big shoulder bag made of fringed white buckskin, rummaged around and handed all three of us visiting cards. It said: Eleanor Travis Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York. TR9-5500.
Instinctively I ran a fingernail over the lettering to see if it was engraved. I hadn't had cards of my own since I'd left the RAF, where all officershad to have them and theyhad to be engraved, to show we were gentlemen as well.
'It's engraved,' Miss Travis said, voice still freeze-dried.
Ken grinned. 'And you know? – I'd've said she was no gentleman.'
Her face twitched for a second, then she smiled outright.
I said: 'Sorry again. But… other people were trying to track him down and I'm sure one did.'
Ken said sharply: 'When was this?'
'Last night. I found out just after I found him. Meant to tell you. Sorry.'
Miss Eleanor Travis, medievalist, asked: 'Just what is all this?'
'Perhaps you can tell us,' I said. 'You were looking for him, others were looking for him. You must have had a reason, so maybe they had the same one."
She nibbled the idea like the first taste of some new foreign food. 'We-ell… I've been researching in Rhodes the last two months and a rumour came through that Professor Spohr had been dropping hints that he had something interesting, and it sounded like he was trying to work up bids from the big museums, and I heard he was going to Cyprus so I called the director at the Met and asked if he wanted me to try and find out what it was all about' ^ 'And he said Yes?' I suggested.
She put on a slightly hesitant, artificial smile.'Er… how well did you know Professor Spohr?'
Ken said: 'I met him in jail, if that's what you mean.'
'Normally,' I said, 'Ken and I only move in strictly Blue Book circles, but you can't blame somebody for the people he meets in jail, can you?'
Her glance flicked back and 'forth between the two of us. 'Yees,' she said slowly. 'Well, this is what the director said.' She took a crumpled cable form from her Sitting Bull bag and passed it over.
Address and mistakes apart, it read: GO CYPRUS IF YOU LIKE WILL PAY HALF EXPENSES BUT IF WE BUY DIRECT FROM THAT OLD CROOK WILL BE FIRST TIME KEEP US INFORMED.
Ken said: 'Yes, I see,' quite tonelessly, and then: 'So you don't know what he was hawking around?'
'I was hoping his daughter would know – unless you do?'
He shook his head. 'He never told me. But he had something, all right.'
Mitzi came out of the bar with Lazaros close behind. He came straight across and asked Kapotas: 'Did Professor Spohr post any letters here yesterday?'
It was a clever idea, but eight hours too late. Kapotas shook his head. 'No. I opened the box before I went home yesterday, and again this morning. Nothing.'
'Did he make any telephone calls?'
Now why hadn't I been that clever eight hours ago? Kapotas reached for the book beside the switchboard and ran a finger down the column. 'Room 323… yes, at 8.25 last night he spoke to a number in Israel, in Jerusalem.'
'Papadimitriou put it through, did he? Why didn't he tell me?'
'He probably forgot in the fuss last night,' I said soothingly. 'He was in a pretty panicky state.' And this was an angle where I didn't want anybody getting rough with fragile fat old Papa.
Lazarosgrunted and looked half convinced. 'Just the number, no name, of course?" He wrote the number down, then stared at it. 'I can ask Papa; he probably listened in.' And headed off to the doorstep where the Sergeant was sunning himself.