The Doomsday Testament

The Doomsday Testament by James Douglas Page A

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Authors: James Douglas
Tags: Fiction, General, Suspense, Thrillers
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with the elderly. Sometimes it’s as if a switch has been flicked. But Stan, he seemed so keen to continue his talk with you. I just can’t . . .’
    She sniffed and Jamie laid a comforting hand on her arm. ‘I got the idea he had a lot to tell me. It crossed my mind that he might have written some of it down?’
    ‘I can have a look,’ she said warily. ‘But I’m not sure I’d be allowed to hand it over to you even if he had. It would be the property of his next of kin.’
    ‘Don’t worry; it was just a thought. I’m sure you have enough on your plate already.’
    She pursed her lips. ‘There’ll be some kind of inquiry. Should we have allowed him out on his own? I’m not certain now, but he was so insistent.’
    ‘Maybe this isn’t the time for it, but I had one other thing I wanted to ask,’ Jamie said. ‘Stan mentioned that he was going to tell me what he had told the other guy. Does that ring any bells with you?’
    Carol’s face set in a frown. ‘Actually, it does. About ten days ago he had a visit from a Polish gentleman doing some sort of research on the lives of exiles still in this country. I wasn’t on duty, so I didn’t see him, but afterwards Stan became quite animated. It was obvious that he’d stirred up memories Stan had buried a long time ago. I think it was one of the reasons he was so determined to get in touch when he heard your grandfather had died. He said he and Matthew had been part of something important and it was time to tell the story. I have a friend in the local newspaper and he’d agreed to come here to interview Stan about it.’
    Jamie thanked her again and set off along the corridor, his head filled with that first glimpse of the old man’s body and weighed down by the questions that would now never be answered.
    ‘Mr Saintclair?’ He turned to find Carol bearing down on him. ‘I think he would have wanted you to have this.’ She placed the faded photograph in his hand, closed hers over it and walked away before he could say anything.
    He looked down at the square of creased paper and wondered what secrets the blank-eyed young faces were hiding.

VI
    A NIGHT SEARCHING the internet drew a disappointing blank on anything called Operation Equity that wasn’t about spending billions to rescue banks. By the time he woke the next day Jamie’s hands itched to get back to the diary, but he still had a business to run. He spent the morning working on the itinerary for an upcoming trip to Switzerland to check out the sale of what might be a Watteau once owned by an Alsatian industrialist and his family. Economically he had to find other reasons to justify the expense. That meant checking out auctions and galleries in Geneva for acquisitions that might yield a small profit. The Watteau itself was such an ugly painting he wondered why anyone would want it back.
    At lunchtime he changed from his suit into casual jacket and jeans and took the train from Victoria station to Welwyn. He still had too much to do before the clearers arrived, and the discovery of his grandfather’s journal had set him back at least twenty-four hours. As he changed trains at Finsbury Park he couldn’t get the diary out of his mind. Nothing had prepared him for the sheer awfulness of his grandfather’s war. He tried to remember Matthew’s eyes. Was there any evidence there that the man behind them had killed and killed again? It was never stated directly in the journal, but there were plenty of hints that couldn’t mean anything else. Hints that put Stan’s boast about breaking necks into perspective. Lieutenant Matthew Sinclair had been forced to kill to survive, and it had changed him. Jamie’s walk from the station to his house took less than ten minutes and on the way he enjoyed the sun on his face and the sound of the birds singing. This was home, familiar and comforting. Welwyn Garden City was well named. It had been planned with wide, tree-lined boulevards radiating from a central

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