I suggest you tether your husband.â
âWhat did he mean by that?â said Stella as Coffin came back.
âTame, tie up, he was just being offensive. Heâs frightened, I think.â
Stella started to mop up the wine. âI wish he hadnât comehere. I donât like it when your work and mine cross.â
âHeâs a madman,â said Letty. âAttractive, but mad. Did he kill the girl?â
Coffin shrugged. âI donât know.â He was watching his wife: she had not failed to notice the phrase about the man trying to get to know Marianne.
âItâs your job to know.â
âIt takes time. He may have had a hand in it.â
Stella said: âI think we had better eat at Maxâs. The casserole got away from me.â She spoke of it as if it was an animal she had been training. No wonder she had trouble cooking, Coffin thought, if sheâs always trying to tame the meat.
âI booked a table while I was out,â he said. âLetâs go. Coming, Letty?â
âWhy do you think I am dressed in Versace? I knew that casserole would never come to the table. I too booked a table. Youâre my guests, by the way. Iâve got something to discuss.â
Over the prosciutto and chilled melon, Letty said: âI wanted to tell you that my daughter has disappeared and that I have engaged a private detective to look for her.â
Coffin opened his mouth to speak but Letty stopped him.
âDonât say it. It is not a matter for the police. Elissa is eighteen, she sent a letter telling me she was going, and she has the money from a small trust fund. I donât think any police force is going to spend any energy looking for her, not even yours, brother.â
âDid she say why?â
âI am too dominating, too successful, she needs to lose me.â
âI see.â He wondered if he did. It was a fair description of Letty: successful, bossy. But were daughters supposed to mind that?
âBut really, I think, she is our motherâs descendant. Every so often she must shake herself free and depart.â
âYou are taking it very well.â
âNo, Iâm not. Iâm trembling with fear inside. Which iswhy I have engaged a private detective to find her. Just locate her ⦠Stella recommended one.â
âDid I?â Stella was surprised.
âWell, you talked of him. Tash. You probably know of him?â She turned to her brother.
âHeâs known,â said Coffin tersely. The Tash Agency had been around for some time.
âHeâs seems efficient and to have a good reputation. I inquired around. And heâs attractive. I like him for that. Lovely fair hair with bright brown eyes, and well groomed. I didnât want a seedy, backroom sort of man.â
âCertainly not that,â said Coffin. âBut heâs pretty much a one man band. Can he cover the field?â
âI think he can do it; he has some help. Iâm convinced sheâs still in London. He thinks not.â
Coffin still looked doubtful. In his opinion London was no place for a girl of eighteen to roam around in. Was she on drugs? Did she have a boyfriend? He considered asking Letty but decided now was not the moment. âYou can always call on me.â
Letty smiled at him and nodded. âSo now you know why I am taking the state of near-bankruptcy and the decline in the theatre with relative calm.â
Stella put her hand gently on Lettyâs arm. âI too have a daughter.â
âBut you know where she is?â
âYes, sheâs putting together a play for the Edinburgh Fringe. Sheâs in the family business, Iâm afraid. I had a card from Fife. She was there last week.â
A small crowd was leaving the precincts of the Theatre Workshop as they came home. Most of them were young people and they were talking loudly and cheerfully.
Coffin raised an eyebrow. âWhatâs