A TRAITOR TO MEMORY by ELIZABETH GEORGE Also by Elizabeth George A Great Deliverance Payment in Blood Well-Schooled in Murder A Suitable Vengeance For the Sake of Elena Missing Joseph Playing for the Ashes In the Presence of the Enemy Deception on his Mind The Evidence Exposed In Pursuit of the Proper Sinner A TRAITOR TO MEMORY Elizabeth George Hodder & Stoughton Copyright 2001 Susan Elizabeth George First published in 2001 by Hodder and Stoughton A division of Hodder Headline The rights of Elizabeth George to be identified as the Author of the Work has been asserted by her in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988. 10 987654321 All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means without the prior written permission of the publisher, nor be otherwise circulated in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser. All characters in this publication are fictitious and any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental. A CIP catalogue record for this tide is available from the British Library. Hardback ISBN 0 340 76707 3 Typeset by Hewer Text Ltd, Edinburgh Printed and bound in Great Britain by Clays Ltd, St. Ives plc Hodder and Stoughton A division of Hodder Headline 338 Euston Road London NW1 3BH For the other Jones girl, wherever she might be Endpapers reproduced by permission, Peters Edition Ltd "O my son Absalom, My son, my son, Absalom! Would God I had died for thee." Samuel II, XIX, 4 Maida Valey London Fat girl can do. Fat girls can do. Fat girls can do and do and do. As she trod the pavement towards her car, Katie Waddington used her regular mantra in rhythm with her lumbering pace. She said the words mentally instead of aloud, not so much because she was alone and afraid of seeming batty but rather because to say them aloud would put further demands on her labouring lungs. And they had trouble enough to keep going. As did her heart which, according to her always sententious GP, was not intended to pump blood through arteries that were being fast encroached upon by fat. When he looked at her, he saw rolls of flesh, he saw mammae hanging like two heavy flour sacks from her shoulders, he saw a stomach that drooped to cover her pubis and skin that was cratered with cellulite. She was carrying so much weight on her frame that she could live for a year on her own tissue without eating and, if the doctor was to be believed, the fat was moving in on her vital organs. If she didn't do something to curb herself at table, he declared each time she saw him, she was going to be a goner. "Heart failure or stroke, Kathleen," he told her with a shake of his head. "Choose your poison. Your condition calls for immediate action, and that action is not intended to include ingesting anything that can turn into adipose tissue. Do you understand?" How could she not? It was her body they were talking about and one couldn't be the size of a hippo in a business suit without noticing that fact when the opportunity arose to have a glimpse at one's reflection. But the truth of the matter was that her GP was the only person in Katie's life who had difficulty accepting her as the terminally fat girl she'd been from childhood. And since the people who counted took her as she was, she had no motivation to shed the thirteen stone that her doctor was recommending. If Katie had ever harboured a doubt about being embraced by a world of people who were increasingly buffed, toned, and sculpted, she'd had her worth reaffirmed tonight as it was every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday when her Eros in Action groups met from seven till ten o'clock. There, the sexually dysfunctional populace of Greater London came together for solace and solution. Directed by Katie Waddington who'd made the study of human sexuality her lifelong passion libidos were examined; erotomania and-phobia were dissected; frigidity, nymphomania, satyrism, transvestism, and fetishisms were admitted to; erotic fantasies were encouraged; and erotic imagination was stimulated. "You saved our marriage," her clients gushed. Or their lives, or their sanity, or frequently their careers. Sex is profit was Katie's motto, and she had nearly twenty years of approximately six thousand grateful clients and a waiting list of two hundred more to prove this true. So she walked to her car in a state that was somewhere between self-satisfaction and absolute rapture. She might be in orgasmic herself, but who was to know as long as she had success in consistently promoting happy orgasm in others? And that's what the public wanted, after all: guilt-free sexual release upon demand. Who guided them to it? A fat girl did. Who absolved them of the shame of their desires? A fat girl did. Who taught them everything from stimulating erogenous zones to simulating passion till passion returned? A terminally hugely preposterously fat girl from Canterbury did and did and did. That was more important than counting calories. If Katie Waddington was meant to die fat, then that was the way it was going to be. It was a cool night, just the way she liked it. Autumn had finally come to the city after a boiling summer, and as she trundled along in the darkness Katie relived, as she always did, the high points of her evening's group session. Tears. Yes, there were always tears as well as hand wringing, blushing, stammering, and sweating aplenty. But there was generally a special moment as well, a breakthrough moment that made listening to hours of repetitious personal details finally worthwhile. Tonight that moment had come in the persons of Felix and Dolores (last names withheld) who'd joined EIA with the express purpose of 'recapturing the magic' of their marriage after each of them had spent two years and twenty thousand pounds exploring their individual sexual issues. Felix had long since admitted seeking satisfaction outside the realm of his wedding vows and Dolores had herself owned up to enjoying her vibrator and a picture of Laurence Olivier as Heathcliff far more than the marital embrace of her spouse. But on this night, Felix's ruminations on why the sight of Dolores's bare bum brought on thoughts of his mother in her declining years was too much for three of the middle-aged women in the group who attacked him verbally and so viciously that Dolores herself sprang passionately to his defence, apparently washing away her husband's aversion to her backside with the sacred water of her tears. Husband and wife subsequently fell into each other's arms, lip-locked, and cried out in unison, "You've saved our marriage!" at the meeting's conclusion. She'd done nothing more than give them a forum, Katie admitted to herself. But that's all some people really wanted, anyway: an opportunity to humiliate themselves or their beloved in public, creating a situation from which the beloved could ultimately rescue or be provided rescue. There was a genuine gold mine in dealing with the sexual dilemmas of the British population. Katie considered herself more than astute to have realised that fact. She yawned widely and felt her stomach growl. A good day's work and a good evening's work meant a good meal as a reward to herself followed by a good wallow with a video. She favoured old films for their nuances of romance. Fading to black at the crucial moment got her juices flowing far more efficiently than close ups of body parts and a sound track filled with heavy breathing. It Happened One Night would be her choice: Clark and Claudette and all that delicious tension between them. That's what missing in most relationships, Katie thought for the thousandth time that month. Sexual tension. There's nothing left to the imagination between men and women any longer. It's a know-all, tell-all, photograph-all world, with nothing to anticipate and even less left secret. But she couldn't complain. The state of the world was making her rich, and fat though she was, no one gave her aggro when they saw the house she lived in, the clothes she wore, the jewellery she bought, or the car she drove. She approached that car now, where she'd left it that morning, in a private car park across the street and round the corner from the clinic in which she spent her days. She found that she was breathing more heavily than usual as she paused on the kerb before crossing. She put one hand on a lamppost for support and felt her heart struggling to keep up its job. Perhaps she ought to consider the weight loss programme her doctor had suggested, she thought. But a second later, she rejected the idea. What was life for if not to be enjoyed? A breeze came up and blew her hair from her cheeks. She felt it cooling the back of her neck. A minute of rest was all she needed. She'd be fit as ever when she caught her breath. She stood and listened to the silent neighbourhood. It was partly commercial and partly residential, with businesses that were closed at this hour and houses long ago converted to flats with windows whose curtains were drawn against the night. Odd, she thought. She'd never really noticed the quiet or the emptiness of these streets after dark. She looked round and realised that anything could happen in this sort of place anything good, anything bad and it would be solely left to chance if there was a witness to what occurred. A chill coursed through her. Better move on. She stepped off the kerb. She began to cross. She didn't see the car at the end of the street till its lights switched on and blinded her. It barrelled towards her with a sound like a bull. She tried to hurry forward but the car was upon her. She was far too fat to get out of its way. Gideon 16 AUGUST. I want to begin by saying that I believe this exercise to be a waste of my time, which, as I attempted to tell you yesterday, is exactly what I do not have to spare just now. If you wanted me to have faith in the efficacy of this activity, you might have given me the paradigm upon which you are apparently basing what goes for 'treatment' in your book. Why does it matter what paper I use? What notebook;1 What pen or what pencil? And what difference does it make where I actually do this nonsensical writing you require of me? Isn't the simple fact that I've agreed to this experiment enough for you? Never mind. Don't reply. I already know what your answer would be: Where is all this anger coming from, Gideon? What's beneath it? What do you recall? Nothing. Don't you see? I recall absolutely nothing. That's why I've come. Nothing? you say. Nothing at all? Are you sure that's true? You do know your name, after all. And apparently you know your father as well. And where you live. And what you do for a living. And your closest associates. So when you say nothing, you must actually be telling me that you remember Nothing important to me. All right. I'll say it. I remember nothing that I count as important. Is that what you want to hear? And shall you and I dwell on what nasty little detail about my character I reveal with that declaration? Instead of answering those two questions, however, you tell me that we'll begin by writing what we do remember whether it's important or not. But when you say we, you really mean I'll begin by writing and what I'll write is what I remember. Because as you so succinctly put it in your objective, untouchable psychiatrist's voice, "What we remember can often be the key to what we've chosen to forget." Chosen. I expect that was a deliberate selection of words. You wanted to get a reaction from me. I'll show her, I'm supposed to think. I'll just show the little termagant how much I can remember. How old are you, anyway, Dr. Rose? You say thirty, but I don't believe that. You're not even my age, I suspect, and what's worse you look like a twelve year old. How am I supposed to have confidence in you? Do you honestly think you're going to be an adequate substitute for your father? It was he I agreed to see, by the way. Did I mention that when we first met? I doubt it. I felt too sorry for you. The only reason I decided to stay, by the way, when I walked into the office and saw you instead of him, is that you looked so pathetic sitting there, dressed all in black as if that could make you look like someone competent to handle people's mental crises. Mental? you ask me, leaping on the word as if it were a runaway train. So you've decided to accept the conclusion of the neurologist? Are you satisfied with that? You don't need any further tests in order to be convinced? That's very good, Gideon. That's a fine step forward. It will make our work together easier if, difficult though the acceptance may be, you've been persuaded that there's no physiological explanation for what you're experiencing. How well spoken you are, Dr. Rose. A voice like velvet. What I should have done was turn straight round and come back home as soon as you opened your mouth. But I didn't because you manoeuvred me into staying, didn't you, with that, "I wear black because my husband died' nonsense. You wanted to evoke my sympathy, didn't you? Forge a bond with the patient, you've been told. Win his trust. Make him suggestible. Where's Dr. Rose? I ask you as I enter the office. You say, I'm Dr. Rose. Dr. Alison Rose. Perhaps you were expecting my father? He had a stroke some eight months ago. He's recovering now, but it's going to take some time, so he's not able to see patients just now. I've taken over his practice. And away you go, chatting about how it came about that you returned to London, about how you miss Boston but that's all right because the memories were too painful there. Because of him, because of your husband, you tell me. You even go so far as to give me his name: Tim Freeman. And his disease: colon cancer. And how old he was when he died: thirty-seven. And how you'd put off having children because you'd been in medical school when you first got married and when it finally came time to think of reproducing he was fighting for his life and you were fighting for his life as well and there was no room for a child in that battle. And I, Dr. Rose, felt sorry for you. So I stayed. And as a result of that, I'm now sitting at the first floor window overlooking Chalcot Square. I'm writing this rubbish with a biro so that I can't erase anything, per your instructions. I'm using a loose-leaf notebook so that I can add where necessary if something miraculously comes to me later. And what I'm not doing is what I should be doing and what the whole world expects me to be doing: standing side by side with Raphael Robson, making that infernal ubiquitous nothing between the notes disappear. Raphael Robson? I can hear you query. Tell me about Raphael Robson, you say. I had milk in my coffee this morning, and I'm paying for it now, Dr. Rose. My stomach's on fire. The flames are licking downward through my gut. Fire moves up, but not inside me. It happens the opposite, and it always feels the same. Common distension of the stomach and the bowels, my GP tells me. Flatus, he intones, as if he's offering me a medical benediction. Charlatan, quack, and fourth-rate sawbones. I've got something malignant devouring my intestines and he calls it wind. Tell me about Raphael Robson, you repeat. Why? I ask. Why Raphael? Because he's a place to start. Your mind is giving you the place to start, Gideon. That's how this process is going to work. But Raphael isn't the beginning, I inform you. The beginning is twenty-five years ago, in a Peabody House, in Kensington Square. 17 AUGUST That's where I lived. Not in one of the Peabody Houses, but in my grandparents' house on the south side of the square. The Peabody Houses are long gone now, replaced by two restaurants and a boutique the last time I checked. Still, I remember those houses well and how my father employed them to fabricate the Gideon Legend. That's how he is, my father, always prepared to use what comes to hand if it has the potential to get him where he wants to go. He was restless in those days, always full of ideas. I see now that most of his ideas were attempts to allay my grandfather's fears about him since in Granddad's eyes, Dad's failure to establish himself in the army presaged his failure at everything else as well. And Dad knew that's what Granddad believed about him, I suppose. After all, Granddad wasn't a man who ever kept his opinions to himself. He hadn't been well since the war, my grandfather. I supposed that's why we lived with him and Gran. He'd spent two years in Burma as a prisoner of the Japanese, and he'd never recovered from that completely. I suspect that being a prisoner had triggered something inside him that would have remained dormant otherwise. But in any event all I was ever told about the situation was that Granddad had 'episodes' which called for his being carted off for a 'nice countryside holiday' every now and again. I can't remember any specific details about these episodes as my grandfather died when I was ten. But I do remember that they always began with some fierce and frightening banging about, followed by my grandmother weeping, and my grandfather shouting, "You're no son of mine' at my father as they took him away. They? you ask me. Who are they? The goblin people is what I called them. They looked like anyone else on the street, but their bodies were inhabited by snatchers of the soul. Dad always let them in. Gran always met them on the stairs, crying. And they always passed her without a word because all the words they had to say had already been said more than once. They'd been coming for Granddad for years, you see. Long before I was born. Long before I watched from between the stairway balusters, crouched there like a little toad and frightened. Yes. Before you ask, I do remember that fear. And something else as well. I remember someone drawing me away from the balusters, someone who peeled off my fingers one by one to loosen my grip and lead me away. Raphael Robson? you're asking me, aren't you? Is this where Raphael Robson appears? But no. This is years before Raphael Robson. Raphael came after the Peabody House. So we're back to the Peabody House, you say. Yes. The House and the Gideon Legend. Do I remember the Peabody House? Or have I manufactured the details to fill in an outline that my father gave me? If I couldn't remember what it smelled like inside, I would say that I was merely playing a game by my father's rules to be able to conjure the Peabody House out of my brain at a time like this. But because the scent of bleach can still transport me back to the Peabody House in an instant, I know the foundation of the tale is true, no matter how much it has been embroidered over the years by my father, my publicist, and the journalists who've spoken to them both. Frankly, I myself no longer answer questions about the Peabody House. I say, "That's old ground. Let's till some fresh soil this time round." But journalists always want a hook for their story and, limited by my father's firm injunction that only my career is open for discussion when I'm interviewed, what better hook could there be than the one my father created out of a simple stroll in the garden of Kensington Square: I am three years old and in the company of my grandfather. I have with me a tricycle on which I am trundling round the perimeter of the garden while Granddad sits in that Greek-temple affair that serves as a shelter near the wrought iron fence. Granddad has brought a newspaper to read, but he isn't reading. Instead he's listening to some music coming from one of the buildings behind him. He says to me in a hushed voice, "It's called a concerto, Gideon. This is Paganini's D Major concerto. Listen." He beckons me to his side. He sits at the very end of the bench and I stand next to him, with his arm round my shoulders, and I listen. And I know in an instant that this is what I want to do. I somehow know as a three-year-old what has never left me since: that to listen is to be but to play is to live. I insist that we leave the garden at once. Granddad's hands are arthritic and they struggle with the gate. I demand that he hurry 'before it's too late'. "Too late for what?" he asks me fondly. I grab his hand and show him. I lead him to the Peabody House which is where the music is coming from. And then we're inside, where a lino floor has recently been washed and the air stings our eyes with the smell of bleach. Up on the first floor, we find the source of the Paganini concerto. One of the bed-sitting rooms is the dwelling place of Miss Rosemary Orr, long retired from the London Philharmonic. She is standing in front of a large wall mirror, and she's got a violin under her chin and a bow in her hand. She isn't playing the Paganini, though. Instead, she's listening to a recording of it with her eyes closed and her bow hand lowered and tears coursing down her cheeks and onto the wood of her instrument. "She's going to break it, Granddad," I inform my grandfather. And this rouses Miss Orr who starts and no doubt wonders how an arthritic old gentleman and a runny-nosed boy come to be standing at the door to her room. But there is no time for her to voice any consternation, for I go to her and take the instrument from her hands. And I begin to play. Not well, of course, for who would believe that an untrained three-year-old no matter his natural talent could possibly pick up a violin and play Paganini's Concerto in D Major the first time he's heard it? But the raw materials are there within me the ear, the inherent balance, the passion and Miss Orr sees this and insists that she be allowed to instruct the precocious child. So she becomes my first violin instructor. And I remain with her until I am four and a half years old, at which time it is decided that aless conventional manner of instruction is required for my talent. So that is the Gideon Legend, Dr. Rose. Do you know the violin well enough to see where it lapses into fantasy? We've managed to promulgate the legend by actually calling it alegend, by laughing it off even as it is told. We say, Stuff and nonsense, all of it. But we say that with a suggestive smile. Miss Orr's long dead, so she can't refute the story. And after Miss Orr, there was Raphael Robson, who has limited investments to make in the truth. But here's the truth for you, Dr. Rose, because despite what you may think concerning my reaction to this exercise in which I've agreed to engage, I am interested in telling you the truth. I am in the garden of Kensington Square that day with a summer play group sponsored by a nearby convent, populated by the infant inhabitants of the square, and directed by three of the college students who live in a hostel behind the convent. We are collected daily from our individual houses by one or another of our three keepers and we are led hand-in-hand into the central garden where, it is hoped and for a nominal fee, we will learn the social skills that are engendered through cooperative play. This will stand us in good stead when we take our places at primary school. Or so the plan is. The college students occupy us with games, with crafts, and with exercise. And once we are set busily to whatever task they've chosen that day, they unbeknownst to our parents repair to that same Greek temple affair where they chat amongst themselves and smoke cigarettes. This particular day is earmarked for hiking although what passes for hiking is actually tricycle riding round the perimeter of the garden. And while I trundle round and round on my tricycle at the tail end of the small pack, a boy like myself although I don't remember his name takes out his willie and urinates openly upon the lawn. A crisis ensues, during which the malefactor is marched directly home amidst a thorough telling off. This is when the music begins, and the two college students who remain after the child has been removed haven't the slightest idea what it is that we're listening to. But I want to go to that sound and insist with a force so unusual that one of the students it's an Italian girl, I think, because her English isn't very good although her heart is big -says that she will help me track it down. And so we do, to the Peabody House where we meet Miss Orr. She is neither playing, pretending to play, nor weeping when the student and I find her in her sitting room. Rather she is giving a music lesson. She ends every lesson1 learn by playing a piece of music on her stereo for her student. Today she is playing the Brahms concerto. Do I like music? she wants to know. I have no answer. I don't know if I like it, if what I feel is liking or something else. I only know that I want to be able to make those sounds. But I'm shy and say nothing of this, and I hide behind the Italian girl's legs, until she clutches my hand and apologises in her broken English and shoos me back to the garden. And that's the reality. You want to know, naturally, how this inauspicious beginning to my life in music metamorphosed into the Gideon Legend. How, in other words, did the discarded weapon left shall we say? to collect one hundred years of lime deposits in a cave become Excalibur, the Sword in the Stone? I can only speculate, as the Legend is my father's invention and not my own. The children from the play group were taken to their homes by their student keepers at the end of the day, and reports were given on each child's development and comportment. What else were the parents spending their money on if not to receive hopeful daily indications that a suitable level of social maturity was being achieved? God knows what the display in public of what should have been a private bodily function earned the willie waver that afternoon. In my case, the Italian student reported on my meeting with Rosemary Orr. This would have occurred in the sitting room, I dare say, where Gran would have been presiding over the afternoon tea that she never failed to make for Granddad, enveloping him in an aura of normalcy as a hedge against the intrusion of an episode. Perhaps my father was there as well, perhaps we were joined by James the Lodger, who helped us make ends meet by renting one of the vacant bedrooms on the fourth floor of the house. The Italian student although let me say now that she might as easily have been Greek or Spanish or Portuguese would have been invited to join the family for refreshment, which would then have given her the opportunity to tell the tale of our meeting with Rosemary Orr. She says, "The little one, he wants to find this music we are listening, so we trail it up ' "She means "hearing" and "track it down," I think," the lodger interposes. His name is James, as I've said, and I've heard Granddad complain that his English is 'too bloody perfect to be real' so he must be a spy. But I like to listen to him anyway. Words come from James the Lodger's mouth like oranges, plump and juicy and round. He himself is none of that, except for his cheeks which are red and get redder still when he realises everyone is listening to him. He says, "Do go on," to the Italian-Spanish-Greek-Portuguese student. "Don't take the slightest notice of me." And she smiles because she likes the lodger. She'd like him to help her with her English, I expect. She'd like to be friends with him. I myself have no friends despite the play group but I don't notice their absence because I have my family, and I bask in their love. Unlike most children of three, I do not lead an existence separate from the adults in my limited world: taking my meals alone, entertained and exposed to life by a nanny or some other child minder, making periodic appearances in the bosom of the family, spinning my wheels until such a time as I can be packed off to school. Instead, I am of the world of the adults with whom I live. So I see and hear much of what happens in my home and if I don't remember events, I remember impressions of events. So I recall this: the story of the violin music being told and Granddad plunging into the midst of the tale with an expatiation on Paganini. Gran's used music for years to soothe him when he's teetering on the edge of an episode and while there's still a hope of heading it off, and he talks about trills and bowing, about vibrato and glissandi with what sounds like authority but is likely, I know now, delusion. He's big and booming in his grandiloquence, an orchestra in and of himself. And no one to interrupts or disagrees when he says to everyone but in reference to me, "This boy shall play," like God declaring Himself for light. Dad hears this, attaches to it a significance that he shares with no one, and swiftly makes all the necessary arrangements. So it is that I come to receive my first lessons in the violin from Miss Rosemary On. And from these lessons and from that report from the play group, my father develops the Gideon Legend which I've dragged through life like a ball and chain. But why did he make it a story about your grandfather? you want to know, don't you? Why not just keep the central characters but fudge on the details here and there? Wasn't he worried that someone would step forward, refute the story, and tell the real tale? I give you the only answer I can, Dr. Rose: You'll have to ask my father. 21 AUGUST I remember those first lessons with Rosemary Orr: my impatience locking horns with her devotion to minutiae. "Find your body, Gideon dear, find your body," she says. And with a one-sixteenth tucked between my chin and my shoulder for this was in the days when that was the smallest instrument one could obtain I endure Miss Orr's perpetual adjustments to my position. She arches my fingers over the fingerboard; she stiffens my left wrist; she grips my shoulder to prevent its intrusion into the bowing; she straightens my back and uses a long pointer to tap the insides of my legs to alter my stance. All along while I play when she at last allows me to play her voice rings out above the scales and arpeggios that are my initial assignments: "Body up, shoulder down, Gideon dear." "Thumb under this part of the bow, not on the silver part, please, and not on the side." "The whole arm up-bows." "Strokes are big and detached." "No, no! You use the fleshy part of the fingers, dear." Continually, she has me play one note and set up for the next. Over and over we engage in this exercise until she is satisfied that all body parts which exist as extensions of the right hand that is to say the wrist, the elbow, the arm, and the shoulder blade -function along with the bow like an axis and wheel, with the body parts keeping the bow on course. I learn that my fingers must work independently of each other. I learn to find that balancing point on the fingerboard which will later allow my fingers to shift as if through air alone from one position to the next on the strings. I learn to listen for and to find the ringing tone of my instrument. I learn up bow and down bow, the golden mean, staccato and legato, sul tasto and sul ponticello. In short, I learn method, theory, and principle, but what I do not learn is what I hunger to learn: how to rupture the spirit to bring forth the sound. I persevere with Miss Rosemary Orr for eighteen months, but soon I tire of the soulless exercises that dominate my time. Soulless exercises were not what I heard issuing forth from her window that day in the square, and I rail against having to be part of them. I hear Miss Orr excuse this to my father, "He is, after all, a very small child. It's to be expected that, at such a young age, his interest wouldn't be held for long." But my father who is already doing two jobs to keep the family at Kensington Square has not attended my thrice-weekly lessons and thus he can't perceive the manner in which they're bleeding life from the music I love. My grandfather, however, has been there all along because during the eighteen months that I have been with Miss Orr, he has not experienced anything resembling an episode. So he's taken me to my lessons and he's listened from a corner of the room, and with his sharp eyes absorbing the form and the content of my lessons and his parched soul thirsty for Paganini, he has drawn the conclusion that his grandson's prodigious talent is being held back, not nurtured, by well-meaning Rosemary On. "He wants to make music, damn it," Granddad roars at my father when they discuss the situation. "The boy's a bloody artist, Dick, and if you can't see that much when it's painted in front of you, you've got no brains and you're no son of mine. Would you feed a thoroughbred from the pig trough? I don't bloody think so, Richard." Perhaps it is fear that garners my father's cooperation, fear that another episode will be forthcoming if he does not acquiesce in Granddad's plan. And it is a plan that my grandfather makes immediately apparent: We live in Kensington, no great distance from the Royal College of Music, and it is there that a suitable violin instructor shall be found for his grandson Gideon. So it is that my grandfather becomes my saviour and the trustee of my unspoken dreams. So it is that Raphael Robson enters my life. 22 AUGUST I am four years and six months old, and although I know now that Raphael would only have been in his early thirties at the time, to me he is a distant, awesome figure who commands my complete obedience from the first moment we meet. He isn't pleasing to behold. He sweats copiously. I can see his skull through his baby-fine hair. His skin is the white of river fish flesh and it is patched with scales from too much time in the sun. But when Raphael picks up his violin and plays for me for that is our introduction to each other his looks fades to insignificance, and I am clay for him to mould. He chooses the Mendelssohn E minor, and he gives his entire body to the music. He doesn't play notes; he exists within sounds. The allegro excitement he produces on his instrument mesmerises me. In a moment he has been transformed. He is no sweating patchy-skinned milksop but Merlin, and I want his magic for myself. Raphael doesn't teach method, I discover, saying to my grandfather who interviews him that "It's the work of the violinist to develop his own method." Instead he improvises exercises for me. He leads and I follow. "Rise to the opportunity," he instructs me over his own playing and watching mine. "Enrich that vibrato. Don't be afraid of porta-menti, Gideon. Slide. Make them flow. Slide." And this is how I begin my real life as a violinist, Dr. Rose, because all that has gone before with Miss Orr was a prelude. I take three lessons a week at first, then four, and then five. Each lesson lasts three hours. I go at first to Raphael's office at the Royal College of Music, Granddad and I on the bus from Kensington High Street. But the extended hours of waiting for me to finish my lessons are tiresome to Granddad and everyone in the house is afraid that they will provoke an episode sooner or later without my grandmother there to contend with it. So eventually an arrangement must be made for Raphael Robson to come to me. The cost is, of course, enormous. One does not ask a violinist of Raphael's calibre to commit vast stretches of his teaching time to one small student without recompensing him for his travel, for the hours lost from instructing other students, and from the increased time he will be spending on me. Man does not, after all, live on the love of music alone. And while Raphael has no family to support, he does have his own mouth to feed and his own rent to pay and the money must be raised somehow to see to it that he wants for nothing that would make it necessary for him to reduce his hours with me. My father is already working at two jobs. Granddad gets a small pension from a Government grateful for the wartime sacrifice of his sanity, and it has been in the course of preserving that sanity that my grandparents have never moved to less expensive but more trying surroundings in the postwar years. They've cut back to the bone, they've let out rooms to lodgers, and they've shared the expense and the work of running a large house with my father. But they have not allowed for having a child prodigy in the family and that is what my grandfather insists upon calling me nor have they budgeted for what the costs will be in nurturing that prodigy to fulfill his potential. And I don't make it easy for them. When Raphael suggests another lesson here or there, another hour or two or three with our instruments, I am passionate about my need for this time. And they see how I thrive under Raphael's tutelage: He steps into the house and I am ready for him, my instrument in one hand and my bow in the other. So an accommodation must be made for my lessons, and my mother is the one who makes it. Chapter One It was the knowledge of a touch reserved for him but given to another -that drove Ted Wiley out into the night. He'd seen it from his window, not intending to spy but spying all the same. The time: just past one in the morning. The place: Friday Street, Henley-on-Thames, a mere sixty yards from the river, and in front of her house which they'd exited only moments before, both of them having to duck their heads to avoid a lintel put into a building in centuries past when men and women were shorter and when their lives were more clearly defined. Ted Wiley liked that: the definition of roles. She did not. And if he hadn't understood before now that Eugenie would not be easily identified as his woman and placed into a convenient category in his life, Ted had certainly reached that conclusion when he saw the two of them Eugenie and that broomstick stranger out on the pavement and in each other's arms. Flagrant, he'd thought. She wants me to see this. She wants me to see the way she's embracing him, then curving her palm to describe the shape of his cheek as he steps away. God damn the woman. She wants me to see this. That, of course, was sophistry, and had the embrace and the touch occurred at a more reasonable hour, Ted would have talked himself out of the ominous direction his mind began taking. He would have thought, It can't mean anything if she's touching a stranger out in the street in public in a shaft of light from her sitting room window in the autumn sunshine in front of God and everyone and most of all me.. . But instead of these thoughts, what was implied by a man's departure from a woman's home at one in the morning filled Ted's head like a noxious gas whose volume continued to increase over the next seven days as he -anxious and interpreting every gesture and nuance waited for her to say, "Ted, have I mentioned that my brother or my cousin or my father or my uncle or the homosexual architect who intends to build another room onto the house 'stopped for a chat just the other night? It went on into the early hours of the morning and I thought he'd never leave. By the way, you might have seen us just outside my front door if you were lurking behind your window shades as you've taken to doing recently." Except, of course, there was no brother or cousin or uncle or father that Ted Wiley knew of, and if there was a homosexual architect, he'd yet to hear Eugenie mention him. What he had heard her say, his bowels on the rumble, was that she had something important to tell him. And when he'd asked her what it was and thought he'd like her to give it to him straightaway if it was going to be the blow that killed him, she'd said, Soon. I'm not quite ready to confess my sins yet. And she'd curved her palm to touch his cheek. Yes. Yes. That touch. Just exactly like. So at nine o'clock on a rainy evening deep in November, Ted Wiley put his ageing golden retriever on her lead and decided that a stroll was in order. Their route, he told the dog whose arthritis and aversion to the rain did not make her the most cooperative of walkers would take them to the top of Friday Street and a few yards beyond it to Albert Road where if by coincidence they should run into Eugenie just leaving the Sixty Plus Club where the New Year's Eve Gala Committee were still attempting to reach a compromise on the menu for the coming festivities, why that's what it would be: a mere coincidence and a fortuitous chance for a chat. For all dogs need a walk before they kipped down for the night. No one could argue, accuse, or even suspect over that. The dog ludicrously albeit lovingly christened Precious Baby by Ted's late wife and resolutely called PB by Ted himself- hesitated at the doorway and blinked out at the street, where the autumn rain was falling in the sort of steady waves that presaged alengthy and bone-chilling storm. She began to lower herself determinedly to her haunches and would have successfully attained that position had Ted not tugged her out onto the pavement with the desperation of a man whose intentions will not be thwarted. "Come, PB," he ordered her, and he jerked the lead so that the choke chain tightened round her neck. The retriever recognised both the tone and the gesture. With a bronchial sigh that released a gust of dog breath into wet night air, she trudged disconsolately into the rain. The weather was a misery, but that couldn't be helped. Besides, the old dog needed to walk. She'd become far too lazy in the five years that had passed since her mistress's death, and Ted himself had not done much to keep her exercised. Well, that would change now. He'd promised Connie he'd look after the dog, and so he would, with a new regime that began this very night. No more sniffing round the back garden before bedtime, my friend, he silently informed PB. It's walkies and nothing else from now on. He double checked to make sure the book shop's door was secure, and he adjusted the collar of his old waxed jacket against the wet and the chill. He should have brought an umbrella, he realised as he stepped from the doorway and the first splash of rain water hit his neck. A peaked cap was insufficient protection, no matter how well it suited him. But why the hell was he even thinking about what suited him? he pondered. Fire and ice, if anyone wormed a way inside his head these days, it would be to find cobwebs and rot floating there. Ted harrumphed, spat in the street, and began to give himself a pep talk as he and the dog plodded past the Royal Marine Reserve, where a broken gutter along the roof erupted rainwater in a silver plume. He was a catch, he told himself. Major Ted Wiley, retired from the Army and widowed after forty-two years of blissful marriage, was a very fine catch for any woman, and don't you forget it. Weren't available men scarce as uncut diamonds in Henley-on-Thames? Yes. They were. Weren't available men without unsightly nose hairs, overgrown eyebrows, and copious ear hairs scarcer still? Yes and yes. And weren't men who were clean, in possession of their faculties, in excellent health, dexterous in the kitchen, and of an uxorious disposition so rare in town as to find themselves victims of something akin to a feeding frenzy the very moment they chose to show themselves at a social gathering? Damn right, they were. And he was one of them. Everyone knew it. Including Eugenie, he reminded himself. Hadn't she said to him on more than one occasion, You're a fine man, Ted Wiley? Yes. She had. Hadn't she spent the last three years willingly accepting his company with what he knew was pleasure? Yes. She had. Hadn't she smiled and flushed and looked away when they'd visited his mother at the Quiet Pines Nursing Home and heard her announce in that irritating and imperious way of hers, I'd like a wedding before I die, you two. Yes, yes, and yes. She had, she had. So what did a touch on a stranger's face mean in light of all that? And why could he not expunge it from his mind, as if it had become a brand and not what it was: an unpleasant memory that he wouldn't even have had had he not taken to watching, to wondering, to lurking, to having to know, to insisting upon battening down the hatches in his life as if it weren't a life at all but a sailing vessel that might lose its cargo if he wasn't vigilant? Eugenie herself was the answer to that: Eugenie whose spectral-thin body asked for nurture; whose neat hair thickly silvered though it was with grey asked to be freed from the hair slides that held it; whose cloudy eyes were blue then green then grey then blue but always guarded; whose modest but nonetheless provocative femininity awakened in Ted a stirring in the groin that called him to an action he hadn't been capable of taking since Connie's death. Eugenie was the answer. And he was the man for Eugenie, the man to protect her, to bring her back to life. For what had gone unspoken between the two of them these past three years was the extent to which Eugenie had been denying herself the very communion of her fellow men for God only knew how long. Yet that denial had declared itself openly when he'd first invited her to join him for a simple evening glass of sherry at the Catherine Wheel. Why, she's not had a man ask her out in years, Ted had thought at her flustered reaction to his invitation. And he'd wondered why. Now, perhaps, he knew. She had secrets from him, had Eugenie. I have something important I want to tell you, Ted. Sins to confess, she'd said. Sins. Well, there was no time like the present to hear what she had to say. At the top of Friday Street, Ted waited for the traffic lights to change, PB shivering close at his side. Duke Street was also the main thoroughfare to either Reading or Marlow, and as such it carried all manner of vehicles rumbling through town. A wet night like this did little to decrease the volume of traffic in a society that was becoming depressingly more reliant upon cars and even more depressingly desirous of a commuter lifestyle defined by work in the city and life in the country. So even at nine o'clock at night, cars and lorries splashed along the soaked street, their headlamps creating ochroid fans that reflected against windows and in pools of standing water. Too many people going too many places, Ted thought morosely. Too many people without the slightest idea of why they're rushing headlong through their lives. The traffic lights changed and Ted crossed over, making the little jog into Greys Road with PB bumping along next to him. Despite the fact that they'd not walked even quarter of a mile, the old dog was wheezing, and Ted stepped into the shallow doorway of Mirabelle's Antiques to give the poor retriever a breather. Their destination was almost in sight, he reassured her. Surely she could make it just a few more yards up to Albert Road. There, a car park served as courtyard for the Sixty Plus Club, an organisation attending to the social needs of Henley's ever-growing community of pensioners. There, too, Eugenie worked as Director. And there Ted had met her, upon relocating to the town on the Thames when he could no longer bear in Maidstone the memories of his wife's lengthy death. "Major Wiley, how lovely. You're on Friday Street," Eugenie had said to him, reviewing his membership form. "You and I are neighbours. I'm at number 65. The pink house? Doll Cottage? I've been there for years. And you're at .. ." "The bookshop," he'd said. "Just across the street. The flat's above it. Yes. But I'd no idea ... I mean, I've not seen you." "I'm always out early and back late. I know your shop, though. I've been in many times. At least when your mother was running it. Before the stroke, that is. And she's still well, which is lovely. Improving, isn't she." He'd thought Eugenie was asking, but when he realised she wasn't -indeed, she was merely affirming information that she already had then he also realised where he'd seen her before: at Quiet Pines Nursing Home where three times each week Ted visited his mother. She did voluntary work there in the mornings, did Eugenie, and the patients referred to her as 'our angel'. Or so Ted's mother had informed him once as together they watched Eugenie entering a cubicle with an adult-sized nappy folded over her wrist. "She hasn't any relatives here, and the Home don't pay her a penny, Ted." Then why, Ted had wanted to know at the time. Why? Secrets, he thought now. Still waters and secrets. He looked down at the dog, who'd sagged against him, out of the rain and determined to snooze while she had the chance. He said, "Come along, PB. Not much farther now," and looked across the street to see through the bare trees that there was not much more time either. For from where he and the dog stood sheltered, he noticed that the Sixty Plus Club was disgorging its New Year's Eve Gala committee. Raising their umbrellas and stepping through puddles like neophyte high wire artists, the committee members called out their good nights to one another with enough good cheer to suggest that a compromise on comestibles had been finally achieved. Eugenie would be pleased at this. Pleased, she'd no doubt be feeling expansive and ready to talk to him. Ted crossed the street, eager to intercept her, his reluctant golden retriever in tow. He reached the low wall between the pavement and the car park just as the last of the committee members drove away. The lights in the Sixty Plus Club went out and the entry porch became bathed in shadow. A moment later, Eugenie herself stepped into the misty penumbra between the building and the car park, working upon the tie of a black umbrella. Ted opened his mouth to call her name, sing out a hearty hello and make the offer of a personal escort back to her cottage. No time of night for a lovely lady to be alone on the streets, my dearest girl. Care for the arm of an ardent admirer? With dog, I'm afraid. PB and I were out for a final recce of the town. He could have said all this and he was indeed drawing breath to do so when he suddenly heard it. A man's voice called out Eugenie's name. She swung to her left, and Ted looked beyond her where a figure was getting out of a dark saloon car. Back lit by one of the street lamps that dotted the car park, he was mostly shadow. But the shape of his head and that gull's beak nose were enough to tell Ted that Eugenie's visitor of one in the morning had returned to town. The stranger approached her. She remained where she was. In the change of light, Ted could see that he was an older man of an age with Ted himself, perhaps with a full head of white hair scraped back from his forehead and falling to touch the turned-up collar of a Burberry. They began to talk. He took the umbrella from her, held it over them, and spoke to her urgently. He was taller than Eugenie by a good eight inches, so he bent to her. She lifted her face to hear him. Ted strained to hear him as well but managed to catch only, "You've got to' and "My knees, Eugenie?" and finally, loudly, "Why won't you see which Eugenie interrupted with a rush of soft conversation and the placement of her hand on his arm." You can say that to me?" were the final words Ted heard from the man before he jerked himself away from Eugenie's grasp, thrust the umbrella upon her, and stalked to his car. At this, Ted breathed a cirrus of relief into the cold night air. It was a brief deliverance. Eugenie followed the stranger and intercepted him as he yanked open the door to his car. With the door between them, she continued to speak. Her listener, however, averted his face, and cried out, "No. No," at which point she reached up to him and tried to curve her palm against his cheek. She seemed to want to draw him to her despite the car door that continued to act like a shield between them. It was effective as a shield, that door, because the stranger escaped whatever caress Eugenie wanted to bestow upon him. He dived into the driver's seat, wrenched the door closed, and started the engine with a roar that resounded against the buildings on three sides of the car park. Eugenie stepped away. The car reversed. Its gears ground like animals being dismembered. Its tyres spun wickedly against wet pavement. Rubber met Tarmac with a sound like despair. Another roar and the car was speeding towards the exit. Not six yards from where Ted watched in the shelter of a young liquidambar tree, the Audi for now it was close enough for Ted to see the distinguishing quadruple circles on its bonnet swerved into the street without so much as a moment's pause for its driver to determine if any other vehicles were in his way. There was just enough time for Ted to catch a glimpse of a profile that was twisted with emotion before the Audi veered left in the direction of Duke Street and there turned right for the Reading Road. Ted squinted after it, trying to make out the number plate, trying to decide if he'd ill-chosen his moment to happen upon Eugenie. He didn't have much time to select between scarpering for home and pretending he'd just arrived, however. Eugenie would be upon him in thirty seconds or less. He looked down at the dog, who'd taken the opportunity of this respite from their walk to deposit herself at the base of the liquidambar, where she now lay curled, with the apparent and martyred determination to sleep in the rain. How reasonable was it, Ted wondered, to suppose he could coax PB into a fast trot that would take them out of the immediate area before Eugenie reached the edge of the car park? Not very. So he would offer Eugenie the pretence that he and the dog had just arrived. He squared his shoulders and gave a tug on the lead, preparatory to rounding the wall and entering the car park. But as he was doing so, he saw that Eugenie wasn't heading his way at all. Instead, she was walking in the opposite direction, where a path between buildings offered pedestrians access to Market Place. Where the blazes was she going? Ted hastened after her, at a brisk pace that PB didn't much care for but couldn't avoid without serious risk of strangulation. Eugenie was a dark figure ahead of them, her black raincoat, black boots, and black umbrella making her an unsuitable ambler on a rainy night. She turned right into Market Place, and Ted wondered for the second time where she was going. Shops were closed at this hour, and it wasn't in Eugenie's character to frequent pubs alone. Ted endured a moment of agony while PB relieved herself next to the kerb. The dog's capacious bladder was legend, and Ted was certain that, in the lengthy wait for PB to empty a pool of steaming urine into the gutter, he'd lose Eugenie to Market Place Mews or Market Lane when she crossed over halfway down the street. But after a quick glance right and left, she continued on her way, towards the river. Passing by Duke Street, she crossed into Hart Street at which point Ted began thinking that she was merely taking a circuitous route home, despite the weather. But then she veered to the doors of St. Mary the Virgin, whose handsome crenellated tower was part of the river vista for which Henley was famous. Eugenie hadn't come to admire that vista, however, for she swiftly ducked inside the church. "Damn," Ted muttered. What to do now? He could hardly follow her into the church, dog in tow. And hanging about outside in the rain wasn't an appealing idea. And while he could tie the dog to a lamppost and join her at her prayers if praying was what she was doing in there he couldn't exactly maintain the pretence of a chance encounter inside St. Mary the Virgin after nine in the evening when there was no service going on. And even if there had been a service, Eugenie knew he wasn't a churchgoer. So what the hell else could he do now except turn tail for home like a lovesick idiot? And all the time seeing seeing still seeing that moment in the car park when she touched him again, again that touch .. . Ted shook his head vigorously. He couldn't go on like this. He had to know the worst. He had to know tonight. To the left of the church, the graveyard made a rough triangle of sodden vegetation bisected by a path that led to a row of old brick almshouses, whose windows winked brightly against the darkness. Ted led PB in this direction, taking the time that Eugenie was inside the church to marshal his opening statement to her. Look at this dog, fat as a sow, he would say. We're on a new campaign to slim her down. Vet says she can't go on like this without her heart giving out, so here we are and here we'll be nightly from now on, making a circumvention of the town. May we toddle along with you, Eugenie? Heading home, are you? Ready to talk, are you? Can we make this the soon you spoke to me about? Because I don't know how much longer I can hold on, wondering what it is that you want me to know. The problem was that he'd decided upon her, and he'd reached the decision without knowing if she'd reached it as well. In the last five years since Connie's death, he'd never had to pursue a woman since women had done the pursuing of him. And even if that had demonstrated for him how little he liked to be pursued damnation itself, when had women become so flaming aggressive? he wondered and even if what evolved from those pursuits tended to be a pressure to perform under which he had consistently wilted, yet there had been an intense gratification in knowing that the old boy still had It and It was highly in demand. Except Eugenie wasn't demanding. Which made Ted ask himself whether he was man enough for everyone else at least superficially but for some reason not man enough for her. Blast it all, why was he feeling like this? Like an adolescent who'd never been laid. It was those failures with the others, he decided, failures he'd never once had with Connie. "You should see a doctor about this little problem of yours," that piranha Georgia Ramsbottom had said, twisting her bony back from his bed and donning his flannel dressing gown. "It's not normal, Ted. For a man your age? What are you, sixty-five? It's just not normal." Sixty-eight, he thought. With a piece of meat between his legs that remained inert despite the most ardent of ministrations. But that was because of their pursuit of him. If they'd only let him do what nature intended every man to do be the hunter and not the hunted then everything else would take care of itself. Wouldn't it? Wouldn't it? He needed to know. A sudden movement within one of the squares of light from an almshouse window attracted his attention. Ted glanced that way to see that a figure had come into the room that the window defined. The figure was a woman and as Ted looked curiously in her direction, he was surprised to see her raise the red jumper that she was wearing, lifting it over her head and dropping it to the floor. He looked left and right. He felt his cheeks take on heat, despite the rain that was pelting him. Peculiar that some people didn't know how a lit window worked at night. They couldn't see out, so they believed no one could see in. Children were like that. Ted's own three girls had to be taught to draw the curtains before they undressed. But if no one ever taught a child to do that .. . peculiar that some people never learned. He stole a glance in her direction again. The woman had removed her brassiere. Ted swallowed. On the lead, PB was beginning to snuffle in the grass that edged the graveyard path, and she headed towards the alms-houses innocently. Take her off the lead, she won't go far. But instead Ted followed, the lead looped in his hand. In the window the woman began brushing her hair. With each stroke her breasts lifted and fell. Their nipples were taut, with deep brown aureoles encircling them. Seeing all this, his eyes fixed to her breasts as if they were what he'd been waiting for all evening and all the evenings that had preceded this evening, Ted felt the incipient stirring within him, and then that gratifying rush of blood and that throb of life. He sighed. There was nothing wrong with him. Nothing at all. Being pursued had been the problem. Pursuing and afterwards claiming and having was the sure solution. He tugged PB's lead so the dog walked no farther. He settled in to watch the woman in the window and to wait for his Eugenie. In the Lady Chapel of St. Mary the Virgin Eugenie didn't so much pray as wait. She hadn't darkened the doorway of a house of worship in years, and the only reason she'd done so tonight was to avoid the conversation she'd promised herself that she'd have with Ted. She knew he was following her. It wasn't the first time she'd come out of the Sixty Plus Club to see his silhouette under the trees on the street, but it was the first time she wouldn't allow herself to talk to him. So she hadn't turned in his direction when she could have done, at the natural moment to offer an explanation to what he'd witnessed in the car park. Instead, she'd headed for Market Place with no clear idea of where she was going. When her gaze had fallen upon the church, she'd made the decision to slip inside and adopt an attitude of supplication. For the first five minutes in the Lady Chapel, she even knelt on one of the dusty hassocks, gazed on the statue of the Virgin, and waited for the old familiar words of devotion to spring into her mind. But they would not. Her head was too filled with impediments to prayer: old arguments and accusations, older loyalties and the sins committed in the name of them, current importunacies and their implications, future consequences if she made an ignorant misstep now. She'd made enough missteps in the past to devastate thirteen dozen lives. And she'd long ago learned that an action taken was the same as a pebble dropped into still water: The concentric rings that the pebble effects may lessen in substance, but they do still exist. When no prayer came to her, Eugenie rose from her knees. She sat with her feet flat on the floor and studied the face of the statue. You didn't make the choice to lose Him, did you? she asked the Virgin silently. So how can I ask you to understand? And even if you did understand, what intercession can I ask you to give me? You can't turn back time. You can't un happen what happened, can you? You can't bring back to life what's dead and gone because if you could, you would have done it to save yourself the torture of His murder. Except they never say it was murder, do they? Instead, it's a sacrifice for a greater cause. It's a giving of life for something far more important than life. As if anything really is ... Eugenie put her elbows on her thighs and rested her forehead in the palms of her hands. If she was to believe what her erstwhile religion taught her to believe, then the Virgin Mary had known from the start exactly what would be required of her. She'd understood clearly that the Child she nurtured would be ripped from her life in the flowering of his manhood. Reviled, beaten, abused, and sacrificed, He would die ingloriously and she would be there to watch it all. And the only assurance she would ever have that His death had a greater meaning than what was implied by being spat upon and nailed up between two common criminals was simple faith. Because although religious tradition had it that an angel had appeared to put her in the picture of future events, who could really stretch their brains to fit around that? So she'd gone on blind faith that a greater good existed somewhere. Not in her lifetime and not in the lifetime of the grandchildren she would never have. But there. Somewhere. Quite real. There. Of course, it hadn't happened yet. Fast forward two thousand brutal years and mankind was still waiting for the good to come. And what did she think, the Virgin Mother, watching and waiting from her throne in the clouds? How did she begin to assess the benefit against the cost? For years newspapers had served to tell Eugenie that the benefits the good tipped the scales against the price she herself had paid. But now she was no longer sure. The Greater Good she'd thought she was serving threatened to disintegrate before her, like a woven rug whose persistent unravelling makes a mockery of the labour that went into its creation. And only she could stop that unravelling, if she chose to do so. The problem was Ted. She hadn't intended to draw close to him. For so very long, she hadn't allowed herself near enough to anyone to encourage confidence of any kind. And to feel herself even capable now not to mention deserving of establishing a connection to another human being seemed like a form of hubris that was certain to destroy her. Yet she wanted to draw close to him anyway, as if he were the anodyne for a sickness that she lacked the courage to name. So she sat in the church. In part because she did not want to face Ted Wiley just yet, before the way was paved. In part because she did not yet possess the words to do the paving. Tell me what to do, God, she prayed in the quiet. Tell me what to say. But God was as silent as He'd been for ages. Eugenie dropped an offering in the collection box and left the church. Outside, it was still raining relentlessly. She raised her umbrella and headed towards the river. The wind was rising as she reached the corner, and she paused for a moment to wrestle against it as it struck her umbrella with more force than she expected and turned it inside out. "Here. Let me help you with that, Eugenie." She swung round and Ted was standing there, his old dog droopily at his side and rainwater dripping from his nose and his jaw. His waxed jacket glistened brightly with damp, and his peaked cap clung to his skull. "Ted!" She offered him the gift of her spurious surprise. "You look positively drowned. And poor PB! What are you doing out here with that sweet dog?" He righted her umbrella and held it over both of them. She took his arm. "We've begun a new exercise programme," he told her. "Up to Market Place, down to the churchyard and back home four times a day. What're you doing here? You haven't just come out of the church, have you?" You know I have, she wanted to say. You just don't know why. But what she said was, lightly, "Decompressing after the committee meeting. You remember: the New Year's Eve committee? I'd given them a deadline to decide on the food. So much to be ordered, you know, and they can't expect the caterer to wait forever for them to make up their minds, can they?" "On your way home now?" "I am." "And may I .. . ?" "You know that you may." How ridiculous it was, the two of them in such an idle conversation, with volumes of what needed saying deliberately going unsaid between them. You don't trust me, Ted, do you? Why don't you trust me? And how can we foster love between us if we have no foundation of trust? I know you're worried because I'm not telling you what it was I said I wanted to tell you, but why can't you let the wanting to tell you be enough for now? But she couldn't risk anything that would lead to revelation at the moment. She owed it to ties far older than the tie she felt to Ted to put her house in order before burning it down. So they engaged in insignificant chat as they walked along the river: his day, her day, who'd come into the book shop and how his mother was getting on at Quiet Pines. He was hearty and cheerful; she was pleasant albeit subdued. "Tired?" he asked her when they reached the door of her cottage. "A bit," she admitted. "It's been a long day." He handed her the umbrella, saying, "Then I won't keep you up," but he looked at her with such open expectation in his ruddy face that she knew her next line was supposed to be to ask him in for a brandy before bed. It was her fondness for him that prompted the truth. She said, I've got to go into London, Ted." "Ah. Early morning, then?" "No. I've got to go tonight. I've an appointment." "Appointment? But with the rain, it'll take you at least an hour.. . Did you say an appointment? "Yes. I did." "What sort .. . ? Eugenie .. ." He blew out a breath. She heard him curse quietly. So, apparently, did PB because the old retriever raised her head and blinked at Ted as if with surprise. She was soaking, poor dog. At least, thank God, her fur was thick as a mammoth's. "Let me drive you in, then," Ted said at last. "That wouldn't be wise." "But ' She put her hand on his arm to stop him. She raised it to touch his cheek but he flinched and she stepped away. "Are you free for dinner tomorrow night?" she asked him. "You know I am." "Then have a meal with me. Here. We'll talk then, if you'd like." He gazed at her, trying she knew and failing to read her. Don't make the attempt, she wanted to tell him. I've had too much rehearsal for a role in a drama you don't yet understand. She watched him steadily, waiting for his reply. The light from her sitting room came through the window and jaundiced a face already drawn with age and with worries he wouldn't name. She was grateful for that: that he wouldn't speak his deepest fears to her. The fact that what frightened him went unspoken was what gave her courage to contend with everything that frightened her. He removed his cap then, a humble gesture that she wouldn't for all her life have had him make. It exposed his thick grey hair to the rain and removed the meagre shadow that had hidden the rubicund flesh of his nose. It made him look like what he was: an old man. It made her feel like what she was: a woman who didn't deserve such a fine man's love. "Eugenie," he said, 'if you're thinking that you can't tell me that you.. . that you and I... that we aren't.. ." He looked towards the book shop across the street. "I'm not thinking anything," she said. "Just about London and the drive. And there's the rain as well. But I'll be careful. You've no need to worry." He appeared momentarily gratified and perhaps a trifle relieved at the reassurance she meant to imply. "You're the world to me," he said simply. "Eugenie, do you know that? You're the world. And I'm a bloody idiot most of the time, but I do ' "I know," she said. "I know you do. And we'll talk tomorrow." "Right then." He kissed her awkwardly, hitting his head on the edge of the umbrella and knocking it askew in her hand. Rain dashed against her face. A car raced up Friday Street. She felt heavy spray from its tyres hit her shoes. Ted swung round. "Hey!" he shouted at the vehicle. "Watch your bloody driving!" "No. It's all right," she said. "It's nothing, Ted." He turned back to her, saying, "Damn it. Wasn't that But he stopped himself. "What?" she asked. "Who?" "No one. Nothing." He roused his retriever to her feet for the last few yards to their front door. "We'll talk, then?" he asked. "Tomorrow? After dinner?" "We'll talk," she said. "There's so much to say." She had very few preparations to make. She washed her face and cleaned her teeth. She combed her hair and tied a navy blue scarf round her head. She protected her lips with a colourless balm, and she put the winter lining into her raincoat to give herself more protection from the chill. Parking was always bad in London, and she didn't know how far she would have to walk in the cold and storm-stricken air when she finally arrived at her destination. Raincoat on and a handbag hooked over her arm, she descended the narrow staircase. She took from the kitchen table a photograph in a plain wooden frame. It was one of a baker's dozen that she usually had arranged round the cottage. Before choosing from among them, she'd lined them up like soldiers on the table and there the rest of them remained. She clasped this frame just beneath her bosom. She went out into the night. Her car was parked inside a gated courtyard, in a space she rented by the month, just down the street. The courtyard was hidden by electric gates cleverly fashioned to look like part of the half-timbered buildings on either side. There was safety in this, and Eugenie liked safety. She liked the illusion of security afforded by gates and locks. In her car a second-hand Polo whose fan sounded like the wheezing of a terminal asthmatic she carefully set the framed photo on the passenger seat and started the engine. She'd prepared in advance for this journey up to London, checking the Polo's oil and its tyres and topping up its petrol as soon as she'd learned the date and the place. The time had come later, and she'd balked at it at first, once she realised ten forty-five meant at night and not in the morning. But she had no leg to stand on in protesting, and she knew it, so she acquiesced. Her night vision wasn't what it once had been. But she would cope. She hadn't counted on the rain, however. And as she left the outskirts of Henley and wound her way northwest to Marlow, she found herself clutching the steering wheel and crouching over it, half-blinded by the headlamps of oncoming cars, assailed by how the blowing rain diffracted the light in spearheads that riddled the windscreen with visual lacerations. Things weren't much better on the M40 where cars and lorries put up sheets of spray with which the Polo's windscreen wipers could barely keep pace. The lane markings had mostly vanished beneath the standing water, and those that could be seen seemed to alternate between writhing snakelike in Eugenie's vision and side-stepping to border an entirely different traffic lane. It wasn't until she reached the vicinity of Wormwood Scrubs that she felt she could relax the death hold she had on the steering wheel. Even then, she didn't breathe with ease until she'd veered away from the motorway's sleek and sodden river of concrete and headed north in the vicinity of Maida Hill. As soon as she could manage it, she pulled to the kerb at a darkened Sketchley's. There, she let out a lungful of air that felt as if it had been held back since she'd made the first turn into Duke Street in Henley. She rooted in her handbag for the directions she'd written out for herself from the A to Z. Although she'd escaped the motorway unscathed, another quarter of the journey still had to be negotiated through London's labyrinthine streets. The city at the best of times was a maze. At night, it became a maze ill lit and in possession of a nearly laughable paucity of signposts. But at night in the rain, it was Hades. Three false starts took Eugenie no farther than Paddington Recreation Ground before she got lost. Wisely, each time she returned the way she'd come, like a taxi driver determined to understand just where he'd made his first mistake. So it was nearly twenty past eleven when she found the street she was looking for in northwest London. And she spent another maddening seven minutes circling round till she found a space to park. She clasped the framed photo to her bosom again, took up her umbrella from the back seat of the car, and clambered out. The rain had finally abated, but the wind was still blowing. What few autumn leaves had remained on the trees were being wafted through the air to plaster themselves on the pavement, in the street, and against the parked cars. Number Thirty-two was the house she wanted, and Eugenie saw that it would be far up the street, on the other side. She walked along the pavement for twenty-five yards. At that hour, the houses she passed were mostly unlit, and if she hadn't been nervous enough about the coming interview, her state of anxiety was heightened by the darkness and by what her active imagination was telling her could be hidden there. So she decided to be careful, as a woman alone in a city on a rainy night in late autumn ought to be careful. She ventured off the pavement and proceeded on her way in the middle of the road, where she would have advance warning should anyone want to attack her. She thought it unlikely. It was a decent neighbourhood. Still, she knew the value of caution, so she was grateful when lights swept over her, telling her that a vehicle had turned into the street behind her. It was coming along slowly, the way she herself had come and doing what she herself had been doing, looking for that most precious of London commodities: a place to park. She turned, stepped back against the nearest vehicle, and waited for the car to pass her. But as she did so, it pulled to one side and flashed its lights, telling her that the way was hers. Ah, she'd been mistaken, she thought, resettling her umbrella against her shoulder and going on her way. The car wasn't waiting for a parking space at all, but rather for someone to come out of the house in front of which it sat. She gave a quick glance over her shoulder when she reached this conclusion, and as if the unknown driver was reading her thoughts, the car's horn beeped once abruptly, like a parent who'd come calling for an unresponsive child. Eugenie continued walking. She counted the house numbers as she passed. She saw Number Ten and Number Twelve she'd gone barely six houses from her own car when the steady light behind her shifted then went out altogether. Odd, she thought. You can't just park in the street like that. And thinking this, she began to turn. Which was, as it happened, not the worst of her mistakes. Bright lights blazed on. She was instantly blinded. Blinded, she froze as the hunted often do. An engine roared and tyres screeched. When she was hit, her body flew up, her arms flung wide, and her picture frame shot up like a rocket into the air. Chapter Two J. W. Pitchley, aka Tongue Man had experienced an excellent evening. He'd broken Rule One never suggest meeting anyone with whom one has engaged in cybersex- but it had all worked out, proving to him yet again that his instincts for picking fruit past its prime but all the uicer for having hung disregarded on the tree so long were as finely honed as a surgical tool. Humility and honesty forced him to admit that it hadn't been that much of a risk, however. Any woman who called herself Cream Pants was as good as advertising what she wanted and if he'd had any doubts, five meetings on-line that had had him coming into his Calvin Klein jockeys without the slightest handshake of the organ on his part should have set his mind at rest. Unlike his four other current cyberlovers whose spelling skill was, alas, often as limited as their imagination Cream Pants had a capacity for fantasy that cooked his brain and a natural ability to express that fantasy that stiffened his cock like a divining rod the moment she logged on the net. Creamy here, she would write. R U rdy 4 it, Tongue? Oh my. Oh yes. He always was. So he'd taken the metaphorical plunge himself this time instead of waiting for his cyberspondent to do so. This was wildly out of character for him. Usually, he played along cooperatively, always there at the other end of on-line encounters when one of his lovers wanted action, but never venturing into the arena of embodiment unless or until his partner suggested it. Following this pattern, he'd successfully transformed exactly twenty-seven Super Highway encounters into twenty-seven intensely satisfying trysts at the Comfort Inn in Cromwell Road a wise and cautious distance from his own neighbourhood and night-clerked by an Asian gentleman whose memory for faces took a far back seat to his abiding passion for videos of old BBC costume dramas. Thus, only once had he found himself the victim of a practical cyberjoke, agreeing to meet a lover called DoMe Hard and discovering two spotty-faced twelve-year-olds dressed like the Kray brothers waiting for him instead. No matter, though. He'd sorted them out quickly enough and he was fairly certain they'd not be trying that little caper on-line again. But Cream Pants had got to him. -R U rdy 4 it? She had him wondering almost from the first if she could do in person what she could do with words. That was always the question, wasn't it? And anticipating, fantasising, and securing the answer were part of the fun. He'd worked very hard to bring Cream Pants round to suggesting that they meet. He climbed to new and dizzying heights of descriptive licentiousness with the woman. To develop more ideas in the carnal vein, he'd spent six hours over a fortnight browsing through the paraphernalia of pleasure in those windowless shops in Brewer Street. And when he finally found himself spending his daily commute into the City wrapped up in lustful visions of their sated bodies inextricably twined on the hideously hued counterpane of a Comfort Inn bed this, instead of reading the Financial Times, that daily staple of his career he knew that he had to take action. So Want it 4 real? he'd finally written to her. R U rdy 4 a rsk? She'd been ready. He made the suggestion that he always made when his cyberlovers requested a meeting: drinks at the Valley of Kings, easy enough to find, just a few steps away from Sainsbury's in Cromwell Road. She could come by car, by taxi, by bus, or by tube. And if upon first sight they found they didn't actually appeal to each other .. . just a quick martini in the bar and no regrets, okay? The Valley of Kings possessed the same priceless quality as the Comfort Inn. Like the vast majority of service-oriented businesses in London, its waiters spoke virtually no English and to them every English person looked alike. He'd taken all twenty-seven of his cyberencounters to the Valley of Kings without the maitre de the waiters, or the bartender so much as blinking an eyelash in recognition of him, so he was confident that he could take Cream Pants there as well without any of its employees betraying him. He'd known who she was the moment she walked into the restaurant's saffron-scented bar. And he was gratified to see that yet again he'd somehow instinctively known who and what she would be. Fifty-five years old if she was a day, well-scrubbed, and wearing just the right amount of scent, she wasn't some slag out on the pull. She wasn't a Mile End shag bag trying to better herself or a Scouse-come-south in the hope of finding a bloke who'd raise her standard of living. She was instead exactly what he'd assumed that she'd be: a lonely divorcee whose kids were grown-up and who was facing the prospect of being called Gran about ten years sooner than she wanted. She was eager to prove to herself that she still had a modicum of sex appeal despite the lines on her face and her incipient jowls. And never mind that he had his own reasons for choosing her despite the dozen years of difference between their ages. He was happy enough to supply her with the validation that she required. Such validation took place in room 109, first floor, perhaps ten yards away from the roar of traffic. Being on the street a request he always made sotto voce prior to securing the room key obviated the necessity of staving the night. It would be impossible for anyone in possession of normal hearing actually to sleep in any of the rooms that faced Cromwell Road. And since spending the night with a cyberlover was the last activity on his mind, being able to say, "God, what a din," at one point or another usually sufficed as prelude to a gentlemanly exit. So everything had gone according to plan: drinks had segued into a confession of physical attraction which had led to a stroll to the Comfort Inn, where vigorous coupling had resulted in mutual satisfaction. In person Cream Pants whose real name she coyly refused to reveal was only slightly less imaginative than she was on the keyboard. Once all the sexual permutations, positions, and possibilities had been thoroughly explored between them, they fell away from each other, slick with sweat and other bodily fluids, and listened to the roar of lorries grinding up and down the A4. "God what a din," he groaned. "I should have thought of a better spot than this. We'll never sleep." "Oh." She took her cue. "Not to worry. I can't stay anyway." "You can't?" Pained. A smile. "I hadn't actually planned on it. After all, there was always the chance that you and I wouldn't have made the same sort of connection in person as we did on the net. You know." How he did. The only question now as he drove home was What next? They'd gone at it like beavers for two solid hours, and they'd both enjoyed themselves immensely. They'd parted with promises made on both sides of 'staying in touch' but there had been ever so slight an undercurrent in Cream Pants farewell embrace that belied her casual words and suggested to him that the course of wisdom called for steering clear of her for a time. Which was ultimately, after a long aimless drive in the rain for sexual decompression, what he decided to do. He yawned as he turned into his street. He'd have an excellent night's kip after his exertions of the evening. There was nothing like spirited sex with a relative stranger of advancing years to set one up for slumber. He squinted through the windscreen as the wipers lulled him with their steady rhythm. He cruised up the incline and flicked on the indicator for his driveway more out of habit than necessity and was thinking about how much longer it would be before Lady Fire and Eat Me each suggested a meeting when he saw the heap of sodden garments lying next to a late model Calibra. He sighed. Wasn't society crumbling round his ears? Beneath a thin protection of their epidermis, people were becoming little more than pigs. After all, why on earth should anyone drop his jumble at Oxfam when he could just as easily toss it into the street? It was pathetic. He was about to drive past when a flash of white within the mass of soaked material caught his eye. He glanced over. A rain-drenched sock, a tattered scarf, a limp collection of women's knickers? What? But then he saw. His foot plunged wildly on the brake. The white, he realised, was a hand, a wrist, and a short length of arm which itself protruded from the black of a coat. Part of a mannequin, he thought resolutely, to still the hammering of his heart. Someone's pea-brained idea of a joke. It's too short to be a person, anyway. And there're no legs or head. Just that arm. But he lowered his window in spite of these reassuring conclusions. His face spattered with the rain, he peered at the shapeless form on the ground. And then he saw the rest. There were legs. There was a head as well. It merely hadn't seemed so upon an initial glance through the rain-streaked window because the head was bowed deeply into the coat as if in prayer and the legs were tucked completely under the Calibra. Heart attack, he thought in spite of what his eyes told him otherwise. Aneurysm. Stroke. Only what were the legs doing under that car? Under it, when the only possible explanation for that was .. . He snatched up his mobile and punched in 999. DCI Eric Leach's body was screaming flu. He ached everywhere it was possible to ache. He was sweaty on the head, the cheeks, and the chest; he had the chills. He should have phoned in ill when he first started feeling like crap in a basket. He should have gone to bed. There, he would have gleaned a double benefit. He would have caught up on the sleep he'd been missing since trying to reorganise his life post-divorce and he would have had an excuse when the phone call came through at midnight. Instead, here he was dragging his sorry shivering bum from an inadequately furnished flat into the cold, the wind, and the rain where he was no doubt risking double pneumonia. Live and learn, DCI Leach thought wearily. Next time he got married, he'd damn well stay married. He saw the blue flashing lights of police vehicles as he made his final left turn. The hour was drawing on towards twenty past twelve, but the rising road in front of him was as bright as midday. Someone had hooked up floodlights and these were complemented by the lightning bolt hiccups of the forensic photographer. The activity outside their houses had gathered a hefty collection of gawkers, but they were being held back by the crime scene tape that had been strung along the length of the street on both sides. Additional tape as well as barriers blocked the roadway at either end. Behind these, a number of press photographers had already gathered, those vampires of the radio waves who continuously tuned in to the Met's frequency in the hope of learning that fresh blood was available somewhere. DCI Leach thumbed a Strepsil out of its packet. He left his car behind an ambulance whose waterproof-shrouded attendants were lounging against its front bumper, drinking coffee from Thermos lids in an unhurried fashion that indicated which one of their services was going to be required. Leach nodded at them as he hunched his shoulders against the rain. He showed his warrant card to the gangling young PC who was in charge of keeping the press at bay, and he stepped past the barrier and approached the collection of professionals who were gathered round a saloon car halfway up the street. He heard snatches of neighbourhood conversation as he wearily trudged up the slight incline. Most of it was murmured in the reverential tones employed by those who understood how impartial the reaper was when he sauntered by to do his grim business. But there was also the occasional ill-considered complaint about the confusion that ensued when a sudden death in the open demanded police examination. And when one of those complaints was spoken in just the sort of pinched-nose I-smell-something-decidedly-unpleasant-and-it's-you tone that Leach detested, he turned on his heel. He stalked in the direction of the protest, which was concluding with the phrase, '.. . one's sleep being disturbed for no apparent reason other than to satisfy the baser inclinations of the tabloid photographers' and found its source, a hair-helmeted ghoul with her entire life savings invested in a plastic surgery job that needed redoing. She was saying, "If one's council taxes can not protect one from this sort of thing .. ." when Leach cut her off by speaking to the nearest constable guarding the scene. "Shut that bitch up," he barked. "Kill her if you have to." And he went on his way. At the moment, the crime scene action was being dominated by the forensic pathologist who, beneath a makeshift shelter of polythene sheets, was wearing a bizarre combination of tweeds, Wellingtons, and up market Patagonia rain wear. He was just completing his preliminary examination of the body, and Leach got enough of a look to see they were dealing with either a cross dresser or a female of indeterminate age, badly mangled. Facial bones were crushed; blood seeped from the hole where an ear had once been; raw skin on the head marked the areas where hair had been ripped from the scalp; the head hung at a natural angle but with a highly unnatural twist. It was just the thing to have to look upon when one was already light-headed with fever. The pathologist Dr. Olav Grotsin slapped his hands on his thighs and pushed himself to his feet. He snapped off his latex gloves, tossed them to an assistant, and saw Leach where the DCI stood, attempting to ignore his own ill health and assessing what could be assessed from his position of less than four feet from the corpse. "You look like hell," Grotsin said to Leach. "What've we got?" "Female. One hour dead when I got here. Two at the most." "You're sure?" "What about? The time or the sex?" "The sex." "She's got breasts on her. Old but there. As for the rest, I don't like cutting off their knickers in the street. You can wait till the morning on that, I presume." "What happened?" "Hit and run. Internal injuries. I'd venture to guess she's ruptured everything that could be ruptured." Leach said, "Shit," and stepped past Grotsin to squat by the body. It lay a scant few inches from the driver's door of the Calibra, on its side with its back to the street. One arm was twisted behind it, and the legs were tucked beneath the VauxhaH's chassis. The Vauxhall itself was unblemished, Leach noted, which hardly surprised him. He couldn't see a driver hotly seeking a parking space and running over someone lying in the street in order to get it. He looked for tyre marks on the body and on the dark raincoat she wore. "Her arm's dislocated," Grotsin was saying behind him. "Both legs are broken. And we've got a bit of candy floss as well. Turn her head and you'll see it." "The rain didn't wash it off?" "Head was protected under the car." Protected was an odd choice of word, Leach thought. The poor cow was dead, whoever she was. Pink froth from her lungs may well have indicated that she didn't die instantly, but that was not much help to them and no help at all to the hapless victim. Unless, of course, someone had come upon her while she still lived and managed to catch a few critical words as she lay dying in the street. Leach got to his feet and said, "Who phoned it in?" "Right over there, sir." It was Grotsin's assistant who replied, and she nodded across the street where for the first time Leach saw that a Porsche Boxster was double parked with its hazard lights blinking. Two police constables were guarding this vehicle at either end, and just beyond them a middle-aged man in a trench coat stood beneath a striped umbrella and anxiously alternated his gaze from the Porsche to the broken body that lay some yards behind it. Leach went over to examine the sports car. It would be a short night's work if the driver, the vehicle, and the victim were forming a neat little triad here on the street, but even as he approached the car, Leach knew that this would not be likely. Grotsin would hardly have used the words hit and run if only the first term applied. Still, Leach walked round the Boxster carefully. He squatted in front of it and examined its front end and its body. He went from there to the tyres and checked each of these. He lowered himself to the rain-washed pavement and scrutinised the Porsche's undercarriage. And when he was done, he ordered the car impounded for the crime team's analysis. "Oh, I say. That can't be necessary," was the complaint made by Mr. Trench Coat. "I stopped, didn't I? As soon as I saw .. . And I reported it. Surely you can see that ' "It's routine." Leach joined the man as a PC was offering him a cup of coffee. "You'll have the car back quick enough. What's your name?" "Pitchley," the man said. "J.W. Pitchley. But see here, this is an expensive car, and I see no reason .. . Good God, if I'd hit her, the car would show the signs." "So you know it's a woman?" Pitchley looked flustered. "I suppose I thought ... I did go over to it... to her. After I rang nine-nine-nine. I got out of the car and went to see if there was anything I could do. She might have been alive." "But she wasn't?" "I couldn't actually tell. She wasn't ... I mean, I could see she was unconscious. She wasn't making a sound. She might have been breathing. But I knew not to touch .. He gulped his coffee. Steam rose from the cup. "She's a fair enough mess. Our pathologist concluded she's a woman by checking for breasts. What did you do?" Pitchley looked aghast at the implication. He glanced over his shoulder to the pavement, as if worried that the collection of onlookers standing there could hear his exchange with the detective and would draw erroneous conclusions from it. "Nothing," he said in an undertone. "My God. I didn't do anything. Obviously, I could see that she was wearing a skirt beneath her coat. And her hair's longer than a man's ' "Where it's not been ripped from her skull." Pitchley grimaced but went on. "So when I saw the skirt, I just assumed. That's it." "And that's where she was lying, is it? Right there by the Vauxhall?" "Yes. Right there. I didn't touch her, didn't move her." "See anyone on the street? On the pavement? On a porch? At a window? Anywhere?" "No. No one. I was just driving along. There was no one anywhere except her, and I wouldn't have noticed her at all except her hand or her arm or something .. . white, this was caught my eye. That's it." "Were you alone in your own car?" "Yes. Yes, of course I was alone. I live alone. Over there. Just up the street." Leach wondered at the volunteered information. He said, "Where were you coming from this evening, Mr. Pitchley?" "South Kensington. I was ... I was dining with a friend." "The friend's name?" "I say, am I being accused of something?" Pitchley sounded flustered rather than concerned. "Because if phoning the emergency services when one finds a body is grounds for suspicion, I'd like a solicitor with me when I... Hello, there. Do keep your distance from my car, would you please?" This last was directed towards a swarthy constable who was part of a fingertip search ongoing in the street. More constables combed the area surrounding Pitchley and Leach, and it was from this group that a female PC presently emerged, a woman's handbag in her latex-gloved grip. She trotted towards Leach, and he donned his own gloves, stepping away from Pitchley with instructions to the man to give his address and phone number to one of the policemen guarding his car. He met the female constable in the middle of the street and took the handbag from her. "Where was it?" "Ten yards back. Beneath a Montego. Keys and wallet are in it. There's an ID as well. Driving licence." "Is she local?" "Henley-on-Thames," the constable said. Leach unfastened the handbag's clasp, fished out the keys, and handed them over to the constable. "See if they fit any of the cars in the area," he told her and as she set off to do so, he took out the wallet and opened it to locate the ID. He first read the name without making a connection. Later he would wonder how he'd failed to twig her identity instantly. But he was feeling so much like trampled horse turds that it wasn't until he'd read not only her organ donor card but also the name imprinted on her cheques that he realised who the woman actually was. Then he looked from the handbag he was holding to the crumpled form of its owner lying like so much discarded rubbish in the street. And as his body shuddered, what he said was, "God. Eugenie. Jesus Christ. Eugenie." Far across town, Detective Constable Barbara Havers sang along with the rest of the partygoers and wondered how many more choruses of jolly-good-fell owing she was going to have to live through before she could make her escape. It wasn't the hour of the night that bothered her. True, one in the morning meant that she was already cutting critically into her beauty rest, but since even doing a Sleeping-Beauty wouldn't make an inroad into her general appearance, she knew that she could live with the knowledge that if she managed to get four hours' kip at the end of the night, she was going to be one lucky bird. Rather, she was bothered by the reason for the party, exactly why along with her colleagues from New Scotland Yard, she'd been crammed into an overheated house in Stamford Brook for the last five hours. She knew that twenty-five years of marriage was something worth celebrating. She could count on the digits of her right hand the couples she knew who'd attained that hallmark of connubial longevity, and she wouldn't even have to use her thumb. But there was something about this particular couple that didn't strike her as right, and try as she had done from the moment she'd first stepped into the sitting room where yellow crepe paper and green balloons made a brave attempt to camouflage a shabbiness that had more to do with indifference than with poverty, she'd not been able to shake the feeling that the guests of honour and the company assembled were all taking part in a domestic drama for which she Barbara Havers had not been given a script. At first she told herself that her disconnected feeling came from partying with her superior officers, one of whom had saved her neck from the professional noose nearly three months earlier and one of whom had attempted to knot the rope himself. Then she decided her discomfort came from arriving at the party in her usual state partner less while everyone else had a companion in tow, including her fellow and favourite detective constable, Winston Nkata, who'd brought along his mother, an imposing woman six feet tall and dressed in the Caribbean colours of her birth. Finally, she settled on the simple fact of celebrating anyone's marriage as the source of her uneasiness. Jealous cow, I am, Barbara finally told herself with some disgust. But even that explanation couldn't withstand much serious scrutiny, because under normal circumstances Barbara wasn't given to wasting energy on envy. True, there were reasons aplenty all round her for her to feel that barren emotion. She was standing in a crowd of chattering couples husbands and wives, parents and children, lovers and companions and she herself was spouse less partner less and childless without a single prospect on her horizon for changing those conditions. But having engaged in her usual reaction to this state of affairs by browsing the buffet table for edible distraction, she'd quickly won herself over to considering all the freedoms afforded her unattached status, and she'd dismissed any disquieting emotions that threatened to undermine her peace of mind. Still, she didn't feel as bonhomous as she knew she ought at an anniversary party, and as the guests of honour took an overlarge knife in their clasped hands and began to assail a cake whose icing was decorated with roses, ivy, twined hearts and the words Happy Twenty-fifth, Malcolm and Frances, Barbara surreptitiously stole glances round the crowd to see if anyone besides herself was giving more attention to his wristwatch than to the waning moments of the celebration. No one was. Each and every person was focused on Detective Superintendent Malcolm Webberly and his uxorial companion of a quarter of a century, the redoubtable Frances. This evening represented Barbara's first encounter with Superintendent Webberly's wife, and as she watched the woman feeding her husband a forkful of cake and laughingly accepting her own forkful in turn, Barbara realised that she'd been avoiding any prolonged consideration of Frances Webberly for the entire evening. They'd been introduced by the Webberlys' daughter Miranda in her role of hostess and they'd made the sort of polite conversation one always made with the spouse of a colleague: How many years have you known Malcolm? and Do you find it difficult working in a world with so many men to contend with? and What drew you to homicide investigations in the first place? Still, throughout this conversation, Barbara had found herself itching for an escape from Frances, despite the fact that the other woman's words were kindly spoken, her periwinkle eyes fixed pleasantly on Barbara's face. But perhaps that was it, Barbara decided. Perhaps the source of her uneasiness lay in Frances Webberly's eyes and what was hidden behind them: an emotion, a concern, a sense of something not quite as it should be. Yet exactly what that something was Barbara couldn't have said. So she gave herself to what she earnestly hoped were the final moments of the shindig, and she applauded along with the rest of the company as the concluding 'and so say all of us' was sung. "Tell us how you've done it," someone from the crowd called out as Miranda Webberly stepped in to relieve her parents at the cake. "By having no expectations," Frances Webberly said promptly and clasped both hands round her husband's arm. "I had to learn that early, didn't I, darling? Which is just as well since the only thing I actually gained from this marriage aside from my Malcolm is the two stone I've never been able to lose from carrying Randie." The company joined her lighthearted laughter. Miranda merely ducked her head and continued cutting the cake. "That sounds a fair bargain." This was said by Helen, the wife of DI Thomas Lynley. She'd just accepted a plate of cake from Miranda, and she touched the girl fondly on the shoulder. "Spot on," Superintendent Webberly agreed. "We've got the best daughter on earth." "Oh, you're right, naturally," Frances said, shooting Helen a smile. "I would be nowhere without Randie. But just you wait, Countess, till the day arrives when that slender body of yours starts to bloat and your ankles swell. Then you'll know what I'm talking about. Lady Hillier, may I offer you cake?" There it was, Barbara thought, that something not right. Countess. And Lady. She was several beats off, was Frances Webberly, giving those titles a public airing. Helen Lynley never used her title her husband was an earl as well as a detective inspector but he'd go to the rack before mentioning that fact and his wife was just as reticent -and while Lady Hillier might indeed be the wife of Assistant Commissioner Sir David Hillier who himself would go to the rack before failing to make his knighthood known to anyone within hearing distance she was also Frances Webberly's own sister, and using her title, which Frances had done all night, seemed to be an effort to underscore for everyone differences between them that might otherwise have gone unremarked. It was all very strange, Barbara thought. Very curious. Very .. . off. She gravitated towards Helen Lynley. It seemed to Barbara that the simple word countess had driven a subtle wedge between Helen and the rest of the party, and as a result the other woman was tucking into her cake alone. Her husband appeared oblivious of this typical man -since he was engaged in conversation with two of his fellow DIs, Angus MacPherson who was working on his weight problem by ingesting a piece of cake the size of a shoebox and John Stewart who was compulsively arranging the remaining crumbs from his own piece of cake in a pattern that resembled a Union Jack. So Barbara went to Helen's rescue. "Is her countess-ship thoroughly chuffed by the evening's festivities?" she asked quietly when she reached Helen's side. "Or haven't enough forelocks been tugged in her direction?" "Behave yourself, Barbara," Helen remonstrated, but she smiled as she said it. "Can't do that. I've got a reputation to maintain." Barbara accepted a plate of cake and tucked into it happily. "You know, your slenderness," she went on, 'you could at least try to look dumpy like the rest of us. Have you thought about wearing horizontal stripes?" "There is that wallpaper I got for the spare room," Helen said thoughtfully. "It's vertical but I could wear it on its side." "You owe it to your fellow females. One woman maintaining her appropriate body weight makes the rest of us look like elephants." "I'm afraid I won't be maintaining it for long," Helen said. "Oh, I wouldn't go to Ladbrokes to put five quid Barbara suddenly realised what Helen was saying. She glanced at her in surprise and saw that Helen's face bore an uncharacteristically bashful half smile. "Holy hell," Barbara intoned. "Helen, are you really .. . ? You and the inspector? Hell. That's bloody brilliant, that is." She looked across the room at Lynley, his blond head cocked to listen to something that Angus MacPherson was saying to him. "The inspector hasn't said a word." "We've only just found out this week. No one actually knows yet. That seemed best." "Oh. Right. Yeah." Barbara agreed, but she didn't know what to think about the fact that Helen Lynley had just confided in her. She felt a sudden warmth swell over her and a quick pulsing in the back of her throat. "Gosh. Hell. Well, never fear, Helen. Mum'll be the absolute word at this end till you tell me otherwise." And as she realised her inadvertent pun, Helen did also and they laughed together. It was at this moment that Barbara caught sight of the caterer tiptoeing along the side of the dining room from the direction of the kitchen, a cordless phone in her hand. "A call for the superintendent," she announced, but she managed to sound apologetic about the fact, and she added, "Sorry," as if there had actually been a chance in hell that she could have done something about it. "Here comes trouble," DI Angus MacPherson rumbled as "At this hour?" Frances Webberly asked. She said anxiously, "Malcolm, good heavens .. . You can't .. ." A sympathetic murmur rose from the guests. They all knew either first or second hand what a phone call at one in the morning meant. So did Webberly. He said, "Can't be helped, Fran," and he put a hand on her shoulder as he went to take the call. Detective Inspector Thomas Lynley wasn't surprised when the superintendent excused himself from the party and climbed the stairs with the cordless receiver pressed to his ear. He was surprised, however, at the length of time that his superior officer was gone. At least twenty minutes passed during which the superintendent's guests finished their cake and coffee and made noises about heading for their respective homes. Frances Webberly protested at this, casting more than one vexed glance at the stairs. They couldn't leave just yet, she told them, not before Malcolm had the chance to thank them for being part of their anniversary party. Wouldn't they wait for Malcolm? She didn't add what she would never say. If their guests left before her husband had completed his phone call, common courtesy suggested that Frances step into the front garden to bid farewell to the people who'd come to honour her marriage. And what had long gone unmentioned between Malcolm Webberly and most of his colleagues was the fact that Frances had not put a toe outside her house in more than ten years. "Agoraphobia," Webberly had explained to Lynley on the single occasion when he'd spoken about his wife. "It began with simple things that I didn't notice. By the time they had a tight enough hold on her to get my attention, she was spending all day in the bedroom. Wrapped in a blanket, would you believe it. God forgive me." The secrets men live with, Lynley thought as he watched Frances fluttering among her guests. There was an edge to her gaiety that no one could miss, a hint of the determined and the anxious to her pleasure. Randie had wished to surprise her parents with an anniversary party at a local restaurant where there would be more room, even a dance floor for the guests. But that hadn't been possible considering Frances's condition, so the venue was restricted to the family's disintegrating old house in Stamford Brook. Webberly finally descended the stairs as the company were making their farewells, ushered to the door by his daughter, who wrapped her arm round her mother's waist. It was a fond gesture on Randie's part. It served the double purpose of reassuring Frances even as it prevented her from tearing away from the door. "Not leaving?" Webberly boomed from the stairs, where he'd lit a cigar that was sending a blue cloud in the direction of the ceiling. "The night is young." "The night is morning," Laura Hillier informed him, fondly pressing her cheek to her niece's and saying her farewells. "Lovely party, Randie. You did your parents proud." Her hand clasped in her husband's, she went out into the night, where the rain that had been falling heavily all evening had finally stopped. Assistant Commissioner Hillier's departure gave the rest of the company permission to go, and people began to do so, Lynley among them. He was waiting for his wife's coat to be unearthed from somewhere upstairs when Webberly joined him at the door to the sitting room and said in a low voice, "Stay a moment, Tommy. If you will." There was a drawn quality to the superintendent's face that prompted Lynley to murmur, "Of course." Next to him, his wife said spontaneously, "Frances, have you your wedding pictures anywhere at hand? I won't let Tommy take me home till I've seen you on your day of glory." Lynley shot Helen a grateful look. Within another ten minutes, the remaining guests had departed and while Helen occupied Frances Webberly and Miranda helped the caterer clear away dishes and serving platters, Lynley and Webberly repaired to the study, a cramped room barely large enough for a desk, an armchair, and the bookshelves that furnished it. Perhaps in deference to Lynley's abstemious habits, Webberly went to the window and wrestled with it to give some respite from his cigar smoke. Cold autumn air, heavy with damp, floated into the room. "Sit down, Tommy." Webberly himself remained standing, next to the window where the dim ceiling light cast him mostly in shadow. Lynley waited for Webberly to speak. The superintendent, however, was chewing the inside of his lower lip, as if the words he wanted to say were there and he needed to taste them for their fluency. Outside the house, a car's gears ground discordantly while inside the doors to kitchen cupboards banged shut. These noises seemed to act like a spur upon Webberly. He looked up from his musing and said, "That was a bloke called Leach on the phone. We used to be partners. I haven't talked to him in years. It's rotten to lose touch that way. I don't know why it happens, but it just does." Lynley knew that Webberly had hardly asked him to remain behind in order to hear the superintendent wax melancholy on the state of a friendship. One-forty-five in the morning was hardly the hour to be discussing one's former mates. Still, to give the older man an opportunity to confide, Lynley said, "Is Leach still in the force, sir? I don't think I know him." "Northwest London police," Webberly said. "He and I worked together twenty years ago." "Ah." Lynley thought about this. Webberly would have been thirty-five at the time, which meant he was speaking of his Kensington years. "CID?" he asked. "He was my sergeant. He's in Hampstead now, heading up the murder squad. DCI Eric Leach. Good man. Very good man." Lynley studied Webberly thoughtfully: faded thin straw-coloured hair hastily brushed across his forehead, natural ruddiness of complexion muted, neck holding the head at an angle that suggested too much weight on his shoulders. Everything about him spoke of bad news and a single source the phone call. Webberly roused himself but didn't move from the shadows as he spoke. "He's working on a hit and run up in West Hampstead, Tommy. That's why he called. It happened round ten, eleven tonight. The victim's a woman." Webberly paused, seemed to be waiting for Lynley to make a response of some kind. When Lynley didn't do anything other than nod -unfortunately, hit and runs happened with a distressing frequency in an urban environment in which foreigners often forgot which side of the street they were supposed to be driving on and in which direction they ought to be looking if they were pedestrians Webberly studied the tip of his cigar and cleared his throat. "From the state of things, Leach's crime scene people are guessing that someone knocked her down, then deliberately ran over her. And then got out, dragged her body to one side, and drove on his way." "Christ," Lynley murmured reverently. "Her handbag was found nearby. Car keys and driving licence were in it. The car itself wasn't far, right there on the street. Inside, on the passenger seat, was a London A to Z, along with specific directions to the street where she was killed. And an address was there as well: Number Thirty-two Crediton Hill." "Who lives there?" "The bloke who found the body, Tommy. The very same bloke who happened to drive up the street within an hour of her being hit." "Was he expecting the victim at his home? Had they an appointment?" "Not that we know of, but we don't know much. Leach said the bastard looked like he'd swallowed an onion when they told him the woman had his address in her car. All he said was, "No. That's impossible," and phoned his solicitor." Which was, of course, his right. But there was certainly something suspicious about that being someone's first reaction to learning a murder victim was carrying his address. Still, neither the hit and run nor the oddity of its discovery could explain to Lynley why DCI Leach had phoned Webberly at one in the morning or why Webberly was reporting that phone call to him now. He said, "Sir, is DCI Leach in over his head for some reason? Is something wrong with the murder squad in Hampstead?" "Why did he phone, you mean? And more importantly, why am I telling you?" Webberly didn't wait for a reply before he sank into his desk chair and said, "Because of the victim, Tommy. She's Eugenie Davies, and I want you involved. I want to move heaven and earth and hell, if I have to, to get to the bottom of what happened to her. Leach knew that the moment he saw who she was." Lynley frowned. "Eugenie Davies? Who was she?" "How old are you, Tommy?" "Thirty-seven, sir." Webberly blew out a breath. "Then I suppose you're too young to remember." Gideon 23 AUGUST I didn't like the way you asked me the question, Dr. Rose. I was offended by your tone and the implication. Don't try to tell me there was no implication because I'm not that much of a fool. And don't make allusions to the 'real meaning' behind a patient's drawing inferences from your words in the first place. I know what I heard, I know what happened, and I can summa rise both for you in a sentence: You read what I've written, saw an omission in the story, and pounced on it like a criminal barrister with a mind so closed as to be virtually useless. Let me repeat what I said in our session: I made no mention of my mother until that final sentence because I was attempting to fulfill your assignment to me, which was to write what I remember, and I was writing what I was writing as it came into my mind. She did not come into my mind before then: before Raphael Robson became, virtually, my full time instructor and companion. But the Italian-Greek-Portuguese-Spanish girl did come into your mind? you ask me in that insufferably quiet calm placid manner of yours. Yes, she did. What's that supposed to mean? That I have a heretofore unmentioned affinity for Portuguese-Spanish-Italian-Greek girls, arising from my unacknowledged indebtedness to an unnamed young woman who unknowingly started me on my path to success? Is that it, Dr. Rose? Ah. I see. You give me no answer. You keep a safe distance in your father's chair and you fix your soulful eyes on me and I'm meant to take this distance between us as the Bosporus waiting for me to swim. Plunge into the waters of veracity, it suggests. As if I'm not telling the truth. She was there. Of course she was there, my mother. And if I mentioned the Italian girl instead of my mother it was for the simple reason that the Italian girl and why can't I remember her blasted name, for God's sake? figured in the Gideon Legend while my mother did not. And I thought you instructed me to write what I remembered, going back to the earliest memory I could recall. If that's not what you instructed me to do, if instead you wished me to manufacture the salient details of a childhood that is largely fiction but safely and antiseptically regurgitated in such a way that you can identify and label where and what you choose Oh yes, I am angry, before you point that out to me. Because I do not see what my mother, an analysis of my mother, or even a superficial conversation about my mother has to do with what happened at Wigmore Hall. And that's why I've come to see you, Dr. Rose. Let's not forget that. I've agreed to this process because there on the stage in Wigmore Hall, in front of an audience paying mightily to benefit the East London Conservatory which is my own charity, mind you, I mounted the platform, I rested my violin on my shoulder, I picked up my bow, I flexed my left hand's fingers as usual, I nodded to the pianist and the cellist.. . and I could not play. This wasn't stage fright, Dr. Rose. This wasn't a temporary block against a single piece of music, which, by the way, I'd spent the last two weeks rehearsing. This was a total, utter, complete, and humiliating loss of ability. Not only had the music itself been ripped from my brain but how to play the music was gone as well. I may as well not ever have held a violin, let alone have spent the last twenty-one years of my life performing in public. Sherrill began the Allegro, and I heard it without the slightest degree of recognition. And where I was supposed to join the piano and the cello: nothing. I neither knew what to do nor when to do it. I was Lot's son incarnate had he and not the man's wife been the one to turn and observe the destruction. Sherrill covered for me. He feinted. He improvised, God help him, with Beethoven. He worked his way round to my entrance again. And again there was nothing. Just silence like a vacuum, and the silence roared like a hurricane in my head. So I left the platform. Blindly, body shivering, vision tunnelling, I walked. Dad met me in the Green Room, crying, "What? Gideon. For God's sake. What?" with Raphael only a step behind him. I thrust my instrument into Raphael's hands and collapsed. Babble all round me and my father saying, "It's that bloody girl, isn't it? This is down to her. God damn it. Get a grip, Gideon. You have obligations." And Sherrill, who'd left the platform in my wake, asking, "Gid? What happened? Lose your nerve? Shit. It happens sometimes." While Raphael set my violin on the table saying, "Oh dear. I was afraid this would happen eventually." Because like most people he was thinking of himself, of his own countless failures to perform in a public venue like his father and his father before him. Every member of his family has a high-powered career in performance music save poor sweating Raphael, and I expect he's secretly been biding his time, waiting for disaster to befall me, making us official brothers in misery. He was the one who cautioned against climbing aboard the swift acceleration that occurred in my career after my first public concert when I was seven. Evidently, now he thinks the chickens of catastrophe, born of that acceleration, have come home to roost on my shoulders. But it wasn't nerves that I felt in the Green Room, Dr. Rose. And it wasn't nerves that I felt before, in front of that audience out in the hall. It was instead some sort of shutdown, which feels irrevocable and complete. And what was odd about it was that despite the fact that I could hear all their voices my father's, Raphael's, and Sherritt's -quite clearly, all I could see in front of me was white light shining on a blue, blue door. Am I having an episode, Dr. Rose? Just like Granddad, am I having an episode that a nice calm countryside visit can cure? Please tell me because music is not what I do, music is who I am and if I don't have it the sound and the sheer chivalry of sound I am nothing but an empty husk. So what does it matter that in recounting my introduction to music, I made no mention of my mother? It was an omission of sound and fury, and you'd be wise to account its significance accordingly. But to omit her now would be deliberate, you tell me. You say, Tell me about your mother, Gideon. 25 AUGUST She went to work. She'd been a constant presence for my first four years but once it became clear that she had a child of exceptional talent that needed fostering, which was going to be not only time consuming but hideously expensive, she took a job to help out with the costs. I was given into the care of my grandmother when I was not practising my instrument, having lessons with Raphael, listening to the recordings he brought for me, or attending concerts in his company but my life had altered so appreciably from what it had been before that day I first heard the music in Kensington Square, I hardly noticed her absence. Prior to that, however, I do remember accompanying her it seemed like every day to early morning Mass. She'd struck up a friendship with a nun at the convent in the square, and between them they'd arranged that my mother could attend the daily mass that was said for the sisters. She was a convert to Catholicism my mother. But as her own father was an Anglican minister, I wonder now how much her conversion had to do with devotion to a different dogma and bow much it bad to do with slapping her father in the face. He wasn't, as I was given to understand it, a very nice fellow. Other than that, I don't recall him. This is not the case for my mother, but she's a shadowy figure for me because she left us. When I was nine or ten I can't remember which1 arrived home from a concert tour of Austria to find that my mother had quit Kensington Square, leaving not a trace of herself behind. She took every article of clothing she possessed, each one of her books, and a number of family photographs. And off she went, like a figurative thief in the night. Except it was the day, I've been told. And she called a taxi. She left no note and no forwarding address, and I never heard from her again. My father had been with me in Austria Dad always travelled with me, and Raphael often accompanied us as well so he was as much in the dark about where Mother had gone and why she had gone as I myself was. All I know is that we came home to find Granddad having an episode, Gran weeping on the stairs, and Calvin the Lodger trying to find the appropriate phone number with no one to help him. Calvin the Lodger? you ask me. The earlier lodger James, is that right? he was gone? Yes. He must have left the year before. Or the year before that. I don't remember. We had a number of lodgers over time. We had to, in order to make ends meet, as I've already noted. Do you remember them all? you want to know. I don't. Just those who figure large, I suppose. Calvin because he was there that night when I first learned my mother had gone. James because he was present when everything began. Everything? you ask. Yes. The violin. The lessons. Miss Orr. Everything. 26 AUGUST I associate everyone with music. When I think of Rosemary Orr, I think of Brahms, the concerto that was playing the first time I met her. When I think of Raphael, it's the Mendelssohn. Dad is Bach, the solo violin sonata in G minor. And Granddad will always be Paganini. The twenty-fourth caprice was his favourite. "All those notes," he would marvel. "All those perfect notes." And your mother? you ask me. What about her? Which piece of music do you associate with your mother? Interestingly, I can't attach an actual piece of music to Mother the way I can with the others. I'm not sure why. A form of denial, perhaps? Repression of emotion? I don't know. You're the psychiatrist. Explain it to me. I still do this with music, by the way. I still associate a person with a piece. Sherrill, for example, is Bartok 's Rhapsody, which is what he and I initially played together in public, years ago, at St. Martin's in the Fields. We've never played it since and we were teenagers then the American and the English wunderkind together made excellent press, believe me but he'll always be Bartok when I think of him. That's just how it works in my mind. And it's the same for people who aren't musical in the least. Take Libby, for instance. Have I told you about Libby? She's Libby the Lodger. Yes, like James and Calvin and all the others except she's of the present, not of the past, and she lives in the basement flat of my house in Chalcot Square. I hadn't thought of letting it till she turned up at my door one day, ferrying a recording contract that my agent had decided had to be signed at once. She works for a courier service, and I didn't know she was a girl till she handed me the paperwork, took off her helmet, and said with a nod at the contracts, "Don't be bugged by this, okay? I just gotta ask. You a rock musician or something?" in that excessively casual and friendly fashion that seems to plague the native Californian I replied, No. I'm a concert violinist. She said, "No way!" I said, Way. To which she produced such a blank expression that I thought I was dealing with a congenital idiot. I won't ever sign contracts without having read them no matter what my agent claims this reveals about my lack of trust in his wisdom and rather than have the poor urchin for so she seemed to me -wait on the front step while I read through the document, I asked her in and we climbed to the first floor, which is where the music room overlooks the square. She said, "Oh wow. Sorry. You are somebody, aren't you?" as we climbed because she noticed the artwork for the CD covers hanging along the staircase. "I feel like a real dope." I said, "No need," and walked into the music room with her on my heels and my own head buried in clauses about accompanists, royalties, and time lines "Oh, this is awesome," she intoned while I went to the window seat where even now I'm writing in this notebook for you, Dr. Rose. "Who's this guy you're with in the picture? This guy with the crutches? Geez. Look at you. You look seven years old!" God. He's possibly the greatest violinist on earth and the girl's as ignorant as a tube of toothpaste. Ttzhak Perlman," I told her. "And I was six at the time, not seven." "Wow. You actually played with him when you were only six?" "Hardly. But he was kind enough to listen to me one afternoon when he was in London." "Very cool." And as I read she continued to wander, murmuring from her rather limited vocabulary of exclamations. She took particular pleasure so it seemed in an examination of my earliest instrument, that one-sixteenth that I keep in the music room on a little stand. I also keep the Guarneri there, the violin that I use today. It was in its case, and the case was open because when Libby arrived with the paperwork for me, I'd been in the midst of my morning practice. Obviously unaware of the trespass she was committing, she casually reached down and plucked the E-string. She might as well have shot a pistol in the room. I leapt up and bellowed, "Don't touch that violin!" and so startled her that she reacted like a child who's been struck. She said, "Oh my gosh," and she backed away from the instrument ivith her hands behind her and her eyes filling. And then she turned away in embarrassment. I set my paperwork aside and said, "Look. Sorry. Didn't mean to be a swine, but that instrument's two hundred and fifty years old. I'm rather careful with it, and I usually don't allow ' Her back turned to me, she waved me off. She took several deep breaths before she shook her head vigorously which made her hair puff out have I mentioned that her hair is curly? Toast coloured, it is, and very curly and she rubbed at her eyes. Then she turned round and said, "Sorry about that. It's okay. I shouldn't have touched it and I totally wasn't thinking. You were right to tell me off, you really were. It's just that, like, for a second you were so totally rock, and I freaked." Language from another planet. I said, "Totally rock?" She said, "Rock Peters. Formerly Rocco Petrocelli and currently my estranged husband. I mean, as estranged as he'll let us be since he holds the purse strings and he's not exactly into loosening them to help me get established on my own." I thought she looked far too young to be married to anyone, but it turned out that, despite her looks and what appeared to be a rather charming prepubescent plumpness, she was twenty-three years old and two years married to the irascible Rock. At the moment, however, I said, "Ah." She said, "He's got, like, this hair-trigger temper among other things, such as not knowing monogamy is usually part of the marriage deal. I never knew when he was going to blow a fuse. After two years cowering round the apartment, I called it quits." "Oh. Sorry." I admit that I felt uneasy with her unburdening of personal details. It's not that I'm unused to such displays. This tendency to confession and contrition seems peculiar to all the Americans I've ever known, as if they've somehow become acculturated to disbosoming themselves along with learning to salute their flag. But being used to something isn't exactly akin to welcoming it into your life. What, after all, is one to do with someone else's personal data? She gave me more of it. She wanted a divorce; he did not. They continued to live together because she could not come up with the money to break away from him. Whenever she came close to the amount she needed, he simply withheld her wages until she'd spent whatever nest egg she'd managed to accumulate. "And why he even wants me there is, like, the major mystery of my life, you know? I mean the man is totally governed by the herd instinct, so what's the point?" He was, she explained, a womaniser without peer, an adherent to the philosophy that groups of females 'the herd, get it?" should be dominated and serviced by a single male. "But the problem is that the entire female sex is the herd in Rock's mind. And he's got to hump them all just to keep them happy." Then she clapped her hand over her mouth and said, "Oh. Sorry." And then she grinned. And then she said, "Anyway. Gosh. Look at me. I'm, like, totally running off at the mouth. Got those papers signed?" Which I hadn't. Who'd had an opportunity to read them? I said I'd sign them if she wouldn't mind waiting. She took herself to a corner and sat. I read. I made one phone call to clarify a clause. I signed the contracts and returned them to her. She shoved them into her pouch, said thanks, and then cocked her head at me and asked, "Favour?" "What?" She shifted her weight and looked embarrassed. But she plunged ahead and I admired her for it. She said, "Would you .. . I mean, it's like, I've never actually heard a violin in person before. Would you please play a song?" A song. She was indeed a philistine. But even a philistine is educable, and she'd asked politely. What would it hurt? I'd been practising anyway, working on Bartok's solo sonata, so I gave her part of the Melodia, playing it as I always play: putting the music before myself, before her, before everything. By the time I'd reached the end of the movement, I'd forgotten she was there. So I went on to the Presto, hearing as usual Raphael's words: "Make it an invitation to dance, Gideon. Feel its quickness. Make it flash, like light." And when I was finished, I was brought back to an abrupt awareness of her presence. She said, "Oh wow. Oh wow. Oh wow. I mean, you are so totally excellent, aren't you?" I looked her way to see that sometime during the playing she'd begun to cry because her cheeks were wet and she was digging round in her leathers, looking1 presume for something on which to wipe her dribbling nose. I was pleased to have touched her with the Bartok, and even more pleased to see that my assessment of her educability had been on target. And I suppose it was because of that assessment that I asked her to join me in my regular cup of midmorning coffee. The day was fine, so we took it in the garden where, under the arbour, I'd been creating one of my kites on the previous afternoon. I haven't mentioned my kites, have I, Dr. Rose? Well, there's nothing to them, actually. They're just something I do when I feel the need to take a break from the music. I fly them from Primrose Hill. Ah yes. I can see that you're searching for meaning there, aren't you? What does creating and flying kites symbolise in the patient's history and in his present life? The unconscious mind speaks in all our actions. The conscious mind merely has to grasp the meaning behind those actions and wrestle it into comprehensible form. Kites. Air. Freedom. But freedom from what? What need do I have to be free when my life is full and rich and complete? I say that there is danger in digging too deeply for meaning when something can be so simply explained: As a child and once my talent became apparent, I was not allowed a single activity that might injure my hands. Designing and creating kites .. . My hands are quite safe from harm. But you do see the relevance of an activity associated with the sky, don't you, Gideon? you ask me. I see only that the sky is blue. Blue like the door. That blue blue door. Gideon 28 AUGUST I did what you suggested, Dr. Rose, and I've nothing to report apart from the fact that I felt a real fool. Perhaps the experiment would have turned out differently had I cooperated and done it in your office as you asked, but I couldn't get my mind round what you were talking about, and it seemed absurd. More absurd, even, than spending hours at this notebook when I could be practising my instrument as I used to. But I still haven't touched it. Why? Don't ask the obvious, Dr. Rose. It's gone. The music is gone. Dad was here this morning. He's only just left. He came round to see if I'd improved at all for that you can read Have I tried to play again? although he was good enough not to ask the question directly. But then, he didn't actually need to ask it since the Guarneri was in the position he'd left it when he brought me home from Wigmore Hall. I haven't even had the nerve to touch the case. Why? you ask. You know the answer. Because at the moment I lack the courage: If I can't play, if the gift, the ear, the talent, the genius or whatever else you wish to call it is moribund or gone from me entirely, how do I exist? Not how do I go on, Dr. Rose, but how do I exist? How do I exist when the sum and substance of who I am and who I have been for the last twenty-five years is contained in and defined by my music? Then let's look at the music itself, you say. If each person in your life is indeed associated in some way with your music, perhaps we need to examine your music much more carefully for the key to unlock what's troubling you. I laugh and say, Did you intend that pun? And you gaze at me with those penetrating eyes. You refuse to engage in levity. You say, So that final Bartok you were writing about, the solo sonata .. . Is that what you associate with Libby? Yes, I associate the sonata with Libby. But Libby's nothing to do with my present problem. I assure you of that. My father found this notebook, by the way. When he came round to check on me, he found it on the window seat. And before you ask, he wasn't nosy parke ring My dad might be an insufferably single minded bastard, but he isn't a spy. He's merely given the last twenty-five years of his life to supporting his only child's career, and he'd like to see that career stay afloat and not go swimming down the plug hole Not his only child for long, though. I'd forgotten all about that in these last few weeks. There's Jill to consider. I can't imagine having a new brother or sister at my age, let alone a stepmother less than ten years my senior. But these are the days of elastic families, and the course of wisdom suggests that one stretch with the changing definitions of spouse, not to mention of father, mother, and sibling. But yes, I think it a little odd, this bit about my father and his production of a new family. It's not that I expected him to remain a divorced single man forever. It's just that after nearly twenty years in which he never to my knowledge even had a date with a woman let alone a relationship whose depth might suggest the sort of physical intimacy that produces children it's all come as something of a shock to me. I'd met Jill at the BBC when I was previewing a rough cut of that documentary they filmed at East London Conservatory. This was several years ago, just before she produced that outstanding adaptation of Desperate Remedies Did you see it, by the way? She's quite a Thomas Hardy buff and she was working in their documentary division then, if that's what it's called. Dad must have met her as well at that time, but I don't recall ever seeing them together and I can't say at what point they became partners. I do recall being invited round to Dad's flat for a meal and finding her there in the kitchen, stirring away at something on the cooker, and while I was surprised to see her, I simply assumed she was there because she'd brought along a final copy of the documentary for us to preview. I suppose that might have been the start of their relationship. Dad became slightly less available to me after that evening, now I come to think about it. So perhaps everything began that night. But as Jill and Dad have never lived together although Dad says that's being arranged shortly after the baby's birth1 really had no reason to conclude there was anything at all between them. And now that you know? you ask me. How do you feel? And when did you learn about them and the baby? And where? I see the direction you're taking. But I have to tell you it's something of a non-starter. I learned about my father's situation with Jill some months ago, not on the day of the concert at Wigmore Hall, not even during the week or the month of the concert, in fact. And there was no blue door anywhere in sight when I was given the news about my future half sibling. You see, I knew where you were heading, didn't I? But how did you feel? you persist in asking. A second family for your father after all these years Not a second family, I hasten to tell you. A third. His third family? You look at the notes you've been taking during our sessions and you see no reference to an earlier family, before my own birth. But there was one and there was a child from that family, a girl who died in infancy. She was called Virginia, and I don't know exactly how she died or where or how long after her death my father ended his marriage to her mother or even who her mother was. In fact, the only reason I know about her existence at all or about my father's earlier marriage is that Granddad began shouting about it during one of his episodes. It was in the same vein as his 'you're no son of mine' curses as he was being taken from the house. Except this time it was along the lines of Dad's not being any son of Granddad's because all he could ever produce was freaks. And I suppose I was given a hasty explanation by someone Was it mother who told me or was she gone by then? since I must have assumed that, in shouting about freaks, Granddad meant me. So Virginia must have died because there was something wrong with her, a congenital condition perhaps. But I don't actually know what it was, because whoever it was who told me about her in the first place didn't know or wouldn't say and because the subject never came up again. Never came up? you query. But you know the dance, doctor. Children don't mention topics that they associate with chaos, tumult, and contention. They learn quite early the consequences of stirring a pot best left alone. And I assume you can make the leap from there yourself: since the violin was my sole concentration, once I was assured of my grandfather's esteem, I thought no more of the subject. The blue door, however, is something else entirely. As I said when I began, I did exactly as you asked me to do and as we tried to do in your office. In my mind I recreated that door: Prussian blue with a silverish ring in its centre serving as a knob; two locks, I think, done in silver like the ring; and perhaps a house number or a flat number above the knob. I darkened my bedroom and stretched out on my bed and closed my eyes and visualised that door; I visualised my approach to it; I visualised my hand grasping the ring that served as its knob and my fingers turning keys in the locks, the lower lock first with one of those old fashioned keys with large and easily duplicated teeth, the upper lock next, which is modern, burglar proof, and safe. With the locks disengaged, I put my shoulder against the door, gave a slight push, and .. . Nothing. Absolutely nothing. There is nothing there, Dr. Rose. Do you see? My mind is a blank. You want to make interpretive leaps based on what I find behind that door, or what colour it is, or the fact that it has two locks, not one, and a ring for a knob Could he be fleeing from commitment? you ask yourself- while I'm inspired by this exercise to tell you bloody sod all. Nothing has been revealed to me. Nothing lurks ghoul-like behind that door. It leads to no room that I can conjure up, it merely sits at the top of a staircase like Staircase, you leap. So there's a staircase as well? Yes. Which, we both know, means climbing, rising, elevating, clawing out of this pit.. . What of it? You see the agitation in my scrawl, don't you? You say, Stay with the fear. It won't kill you, Gideon. Feelings won't kill you. You are not alone. I never thought that I was, I say. Don't put words in my mouth, Dr. Rose. 2 SEPTEMBER Libby was here. She knows something's not right since she hasn't heard the violin in weeks and she generally hears it for hours on end when I'm practising. That's largely why I hadn't let the basement flat once the original tenants left. I thought about it when I first bought and moved into this house in Chalcot Square, but I didn't want the distraction of a tenant coming and going even by a separate entrance and I didn't want to have to limit my hours of practice out of concern for someone else. I told Libby all this when she was leaving that day, when she'd zipped herself into her leathers, returned her helmet to her head just outside my front door, and caught sight of the empty flat below through the wrought iron railings. She said, "Wow. Is that for rent or anything?" And I explained that I left it empty. There was a young couple living there when I first bought the building, I told her. But as they weren't able to develop a passion for the violin at odd hours of the night, they soon decamped. She cocked her head. She said, "Hey. How old are you anyway? And do you always talk like a bottle's in your butt? When you were showing me the kites, you sounded totally normal. So what's up? Is this about being English or something? Step out of the house and all of a sudden you're Henry James?" "He wasn't English," I informed her. "Well. Sorry." She began to fasten her helmet's strap, but she seemed agitated because she had trouble with it. "I got through high school on Cliff's Notes, bud, so I wouldn't know Henry James from Sid Vicious. I don't even know why he popped into my head. Or why Sid Vicious did, for that matter." "Who's Sid Vicious?" I asked her solemnly. She peered at me. "Come on. You're joking." "Yes," I said. And then she laughed. Well, not laughed actually. It was more like a hoot. And she grabbed my arm and said, "You, you! with such an inordinate degree of familiarity that I was both astounded and charmed. So I offered to show her the basement flat. Why? you ask. Because she'd asked about it and I wanted to show her and I suppose I wanted her company for a while. She was so absolutely un-English. You say, I didn't mean why did you show her the flat, Gideon. I meant why are you telling me about Libby. Because she was here, just here, just now. She's significant, isn't she? I don't know. 3 SEPTEMBER "It's Liberty," she tells me. "God, isn't that, like, totally the worst? My parents were hippies before they were yuppies, which was way before my dad made, like, a billion dollars in Silicon Valley. You do know about Silicon Valley, don't you?" We are walking to the top of Primrose Hill. I have one of my kites. Libby's talked me into flying it this late afternoon, sometime last year. I ought to be rehearsing since I'm due to record Paganini the second violin concerto, this is with the Philharmonic in less than three weeks and the Allegro maestoso has been giving me some trouble. But Libby's returned from a confrontation with the acidulous Rock about wages he's withheld from her again, and she's reported his response to her request for her money: "Thejerksaid, "Flyakite, bitch," so I thought I'd take him up on it. Come on, Gideon, you're working too hard anyway." I've been at it for six hours, two increments of three with an hour's break to walk over to Regent's Park at midday, so I agree to the plan. I allow her to choose the kite, and she selects a multi-level affair that spins and requires just the right wind velocity to show its best stuff. We head off. We follow the curve of Chalcot Crescent more gentrification sourly remarked upon by Libby who appears to prefer London decaying to London renewed and dash across Regent's Park Road and thence into the park, where we set off up the side of the hill. "Too much wind," I tell her, and I have to raise my voice because the wind gusts fiercely against the kite and the nylon slaps against me. "You've got to have perfect conditions for this one. I don't expect we'll even get it in the air." That proves to be the case, much to her disappointment because it seems that she 'just totally wanted to put it to Rock. The creep. He's threatening to tell whoever it is that gets told this with a wave of her hand in the vague direction of Westminster, by which I assume she must be talking about the Government 'that we were never really married in the first place. I mean physically married like in doing the deed with each other. Which is, like, just such a crock of shit that you wouldn't Relieve." "And what would happen if he told the Government that you weren't really married?" "Except that we were. We are. Geez, he makes me nuts." As it turns out, she's afraid that her status in the country will change if her estranged husband has his way. And because she's moved from his doubtless to my imagination insalubrious home in Bermondsey to the basement flat in Chalcot Square, he's afraid that he's losing her for good, which he apparently doesn't wish to do despite his continued woman ising So they've had yet another row the end of which was his directive to her about kite flying. Sorry not to be able to accommodate her, I invite her for a coffee instead. It's over coffee that she tells me the name for which Libby is merely a diminutive: Liberty. "Hippies," she says again of her parents. "They wanted their kids to have totally far out names this with a mock inhalation of an imaginary cannabis cigarette "My sister's is even worse: Equality, if you can believe it. Ali for short. And if there been a third kid in the family "Fraternity?" I say. "You got it," she rejoins. "But I should be excessively glad they went for abstract nouns. I mean, God, it could be totally worse. My name could be Tree." I chuckle. "Or perhaps just a type of tree: pine, oak, willow." "Willow Neale. I could get behind that." She fingers through the packets of sugar on the table to find the dieters' sweetener. She is, I have discovered, a chronic dieter whose pursuit of bodily perfection has been 'the rip tide in the otherwise peaceful ocean of my existence', she said. She dumps the sweetener into her non-fat cafe latte and says, "What about you, Gid?" "Me?" "Your parents. What are they like? Not former flower children, I bet." She hadn't yet met my father, you see, although he had seen her from the music room late one afternoon when she returned home from work on her Suzuki and parked it in her accustomed place on the pavement, right next to the steps that lead down to the basement flat. She roared up and gunned the engine two or three times, as is her habit, creating a ruckus that caught Dad's attention. He went to the window, saw her, and said, "I'll be damned. There's an infernal cyclist actually chaining his motorbike to your front rails, Gideon. See here .. ." and be began to open the window. I said, "That's Libby Neale. It's fine, Dad. She lives here." He turned slowly away from the glass. "What? That's a woman out there? She lives here?" "Below. In the flat. I decided to let it out. Did I forget to tell you?" I hadn't. But my failure to mention Libby and the flat hadn't been so much a deliberate omission as a subject that hadn't come up. Dad and I talk every day, but our conversations are always about our professional concerns, like an upcoming concert, a tour he might be organising, a recording session that hadn't gone well, a request for an interview or a personal appearance. Witness the fact that I didn't know a thing about his relationship with Jill until not mentioning it became more awkward than mentioning it: The sudden appearance of an obviously pregnant woman in one's life will demand some sort of explanation, after all. But otherwise, we've never had a chummy father-and-son relationship. We've both been absorbed with my music since my childhood, and this concentration on both our parts has precluded the possibility or perhaps obviated the necessity of the sort of soul-baring that appears to be the hallmark of closeness between people these days. Mind you, I don't regret for an instant that Dad and I have the sort of connection with each other that we have. It's firm and true, and if it's not the sort of bond that makes us want to hike across the Himalayas together or paddle up the Nile, it's still a relationship that strengthens and supports me. Truth be told, if it were not for my father, Dr. Rose, I would not be where I am today. 4 SEPTEMBER No. You will not catch me with that. Where are you today, Gideon? you ask me blandly. But I refuse to participate. My father plays no part in this, in whatever this is. If I cannot bring myself to even pick up the Guarneri, it is not my father's fault. I refuse to become one of those gormless pulers who lay the blame for their every difficulty at the feet of their parents. Dad's life was rough. He did his best. Rough in what way? you want to know. Well, can you imagine having Granddad for a father? Being sent off to school when you were six? Growing up with a steady diet of someone's psychotic episodes to feed you when you were at home? And always knowing that there was never a hope in hell that you could fully measure up no matter what you did because you were adopted in the first place and your father never let you forget it? No. Dad's done the best he could as a father. And he's done better than most as a son. Better than yourself as a son? you ask me. You'll have to get that information from Dad. But what do you think about yourself as a son, Gideon? What comes first to your mind? Disappointment, I say. That you've disappointed your father? No. That I mustn't. But that I might. Has he let you know how important it is not to disappoint him? Never once. Not at all. But.. . But? He doesn't like Libby. I somehow knew that he wouldn't like her or at least wouldn't like her being there. He would consider her a potential distraction or, worse, an impediment to my work. You ask, Is that why he said "It's that girl, isn't it?" when you had your blackout in Wigmore Hall? He leapt right to her, didn't he? Yes. Why? It's not that he doesn't want me to be with someone. Why wouldn't he? Family is everything to my father. But family is going to be stopped short if I don't marry someday and have children of my own. Except there's another child on the way now, isn't there? The family will continue anyway, no matter what you do. Yes, it will. So now he can disapprove of every woman in your life without fearing the consequences of your taking that disapproval to heart and never marrying, can't he, Gideon? No! I will not play this game. This is not about my father. If he doesn't like Libby, it's because he's concerned about the impact she could have on my music. And he's well within his rights to be concerned. Libby doesn't know a bow from a kitchen knife. Does she interrupt your work? No, she doesn't. Does she display an indifference to your music? No. Does she intrude? Ignore requests for solitude? Make demands upon you that violate the time you've set aside for your music? Never. You said she was a philistine. Have you discovered that she clings to her ignorance like a badge of accomplishment? No. I haven't. But still your father doesn't like her. Look, it's for my own good. He's never made a move that wasn't for my good. I'm here with you because of him, Dr. Rose. When he understood what had happened to me in Wigmore Hall, he didn't say, "Buck up! Get a grip! You've a God damn audience who've paid to see you!" No. What he said was, "He's ill," to Raphael. "Make our excuses," and he spirited me out of there. He took me home and he put me to bed and he sat next to me all night and he said, "We'll handle this, Gideon. Just sleep for now." He instructed Raphael to find help. Raphael knew about your own father's work with blocked artists, Dr. Rose. And I came to you. Because my father wants me to have my music, I came to you. 5 SEPTEMBER No one else knows. Just the three of us: Dad, Raphael, and I. Even my publicist isn't clear what's going on. Under a doctor's care, she's given out, telling the world that it's merely exhaustion. I assume the interpretation given to that story is one variation or another of The Artist Piqued, and that's fine with me. Better the assumption that I stalked off the platform because I did not like the Hall's lighting than the truth reach public consumption. Which truth is that? you ask me. Is there more than one? I want to know. Certainly, you say. There's the truth of what's happened to you and the truth of why. What's happened is called psycho genic amnesia, Gideon. Why it's happened is the reason for our meetings. Are you saying that until we know why I have this.. . this .. . what did you call it? Psychogenic amnesia. It's like hysterical paralysis or blindness: Part of you that's always worked in this case your musical memory, if you'd like to call it that simply stops working. Until we know why you're experiencing this trouble, we won't be able to change it. I'm wondering if you know how I recoil from that information, Dr. Rose. You impart it with perfect sympathy, but still I feel like a freak. And yes, yes, I know how that word resonates in my past, so you needn't point that out to me. I still hear Granddad howling it at my father as they drag him away and I still apply that word to myself every day now. Freak, freak, freak, I call myself. Finish the freak off. Put an end to the freak. Is that what you are? you ask me. What else could I be? I never rode a bicycle, played rugby or cricket, hit a tennis ball, or even went to school. I had a psychotic grandfather, a mother who would have been happier as a nun and probably ended up in a convent for all I know, a father who slaved at two jobs till I was established professionally, and a violin instructor who shepherded me from concert tours to recording engagements and otherwise never let me out of his sight. I was coddled, catered to, and worshipped, Dr. Rose. Who would emerge from conditions like the fit as anything other than a bona fide freak? Is it any wonder that I'm riddled with ulcers? That I puke my guts out before a performance? That my brain sometimes pounds like a hammer in my skull? That I haven't been able to be with a woman in more than six years? That even when I was able to take a woman to bed, there was neither closeness, joy, nor passion in the act but merely a need to have done, have it over, have my paltry release, and then have her gone? And what is the sum of all that, Dr. Rose, if not a sure fire genuine freak? I SEPTEMBER Libby asked this morning if something was wrong. She came upstairs in her usual leisure attire denim dungarees, a T-shirt, and hiking boots and she seemed about to head out for a stroll because she was wearing the Walkman she usually takes with her when she's engaging in one of her diet hikes. I was in the window seat, doing my duty with this journal when she turned and saw me watching her. Up she came. She's trying a new diet, she told me. The No-White-Diet, as she calls it. "I've tried the Mayo diet, the cabbage soup diet, the Zone diet, the Scarsdale diet, the you-name-it-diet. Nothing's worked, so I'm on to this." This, she tells me, consists of eating whatever she wants as long as it isn't white. White foods unnaturally altered with food colouring count as white as well. She is, I have learned, obsessed with her weight and this is a mystery to me. She isn't fat, as far as I can tell, which admittedly isn't very far since she's always garbed either in her leathers for the courier service or in her dungarees. She doesn't appear to have any other clothes. But even if she does look slightly podgy to some people and mind you, I'm not saying that she looks slightly podgy to me it's probably because her face is round. Don't round faces make one look plump? I tell her this but it's no consolation. "We live in skeletal times," she says. "You're lucky to be naturally skinny." I've never told her the cost of this emaciation that she seems to admire. Instead, I've said, "Women are too obsessed with their weight. You look perfectly fine." On one occasion when I say this, she responds with, "So if I look so perfectly fine, take me on a date, why don't you?" And this is how we begin to see each other. What an odd expression that is, 'to see each other', as if we're incapable of seeing another person until we're socially involved. I don't much like it 'seeing each other' because it smacks of a euphemism where one isn't needed. Dating, on the other hand, sounds so adolescent. And even if that weren't the case, I wouldn't call what we're doing dating. So what are you doing with Liberty Neale? you want to know. And you mean, Are you sleeping with her, Gideon? Is she the woman who's managed to melt the ice in your veins? I suppose that depends on what you mean by sleeping with her, Dr. Rose. And there's another euphemism for you. Why do we use a term like sleeping when sleeping is the last thing we intend to do when we climb into bed with the opposite sex? But yes, we are sleeping together. Now and again. But by sleeping, I mean sleeping, not sex. We're neither of us ready for anything else. How did this come about? you want to know. It was a natural progression. One night she made a meal for me at the end of a particularly exhausting day of rehearsals for a concert at the Barbican. I fell asleep on her bed where we'd been sitting, listening to a recording. She covered me with a blanket and joined me under it, and there we remained till morning. Now and again we sleep together still. I suppose we both find it comforting in some way. Nurturing, you say. In that it feels good to have her there, yes. Then it's nurturing as well. Something that was missing during your childhood, Gideon, you point out. If everyone's concentration was on your growth and performance as an artist, it wouldn't be unusual for other more essential needs to have gone both un recognised and unfulfilled. Dr. Rose, I insist upon your accepting what I say: I had good parents. As I've said, my father worked endlessly just to make ends meet. Once it became clear that I had the potential, the talent, and the desire to be .. . let's call it who I am today, my mother went out and found a job as well to help cover all the expenses incurred. And if I didn't see my parents as often as I might have done because of this, I had Raphael with me for hours each day and when he wasn't there, I had Sarah-Jane. Who was she? you ask. She was Sarah-Jane Beckett. I don't quite know what to call her, actually. Governess is too anachronistic a term and Sarah-Jane would have sorted you out in fairly short order had you ever called her a governess. So I suppose we'd have to call her my teacher. As I noted earlier, I never attended school once it became apparent that the violin would be my life because regular school hours conflicted with my schedule of lessons. So Sarah-Jane was employed as my teacher. When I wasn't working with Raphael, I was working with her. And because we fitted in lessons where and as we could, she lived with us. In fact, she lived with us for years. She must have arrived when I was five or six once my parents saw how impossible it was going to be for me to be educated in a traditional fashion and she stayed until I was sixteen, at which time my education was complete and my schedule of concerts, recordings, rehearsals, and practice periods precluded any further courses of study. But until that point, I had daily lessons with Sarah-Jane. Was she a surrogate mother? you want to know. Always, always it comes back to my mother. Are you looking for Oedipal connections, doctor? How about an unresolved Oedipal complex? Mother trots off to work when son is five, leaving him incapable of laying to rest his unconscious desire to bed her? Then mother disappears when son is eight or nine or ten or however old he was because I do not remember nor do I care to, and she is never heard from again. I remember, though, her silence. Odd. It's just come to me now. My mother's silence. And I remember waking up one night while she was still with us and finding her lying in bed with me. She's holding me and it's very difficult to breathe because of the way she's holding me. It's difficult because her arms are round me and she's got my head somehow .. . Never mind. I don't remember. How is she holding you, Gideon? I don't remember, just that I can't breathe very well but I can feel her breathing and it's very hot. Her breath is hot? No. Just the feeling. Where I am. I want to escape. From her? No. Just escape. Run, actually. Of course, this could all be a dream. It was so long ago. Did it happen more than once? you want to know. I see where you're heading, and I refuse to pretend that I remember what you seem to want me to remember. The facts are these: My mother is beside me in my bed, I am held by her, it is hot, I smell her perfume. And there's a weight on my cheek as well. I do feel that weight. It's heavy but inert and it smells of perfume. Odd, that I would recall that smell. I couldn't tell you what it was her perfume, Dr. Rose but I expect that if I ever smelled it again, I would know it at once and it would remind me of Mother. I expect she was holding you between her breasts, you tell me. That's why you would both feel the weight and smell the perfume. Is it dark in your bedroom or is there a light? I don't recall. Just the heat, that weight, the scent. And silence. Have you lain that way with anyone else? With Libby perhaps? Or whoever preceded Libby? God, no! And this is not about my mother! All right. Yes. Of course I know that her desertion of me of us looms large. I'm not an idiot, Dr. Rose. I come home from Austria, my mother is gone, I never see the woman again, never hear her voice, never read so much as a sentence in her handwriting addressed to me .. . Yes, yes, I know the song: This is a Very Big Incident. And since I never heard from her again, I also see the logical connection that I would make as a child: It was my fault. Perhaps I make that connection when I am eight or nine or however old I was when she left, but it is not a connection that I recall making and it's not a connection that I make now. She simply left. End of story. What do you mean end of story? you ask. Just that. We never spoke of her. Or at least I never spoke of her. And if my grandparents and father did, and if Raphael or Sarah-Jane or James the Lodger He was still there when she left? He was there .. . Or was he? No. He couldn't have been. It was Calvin, wasn't it? Didn't I say earlier it was Calvin? Calvin the Lodger trying to phone for help in the midst of Granddad's episode after Mother left us ... So James had long ago decamped as well. Decamped, you say. There's a secrecy implied in decamped, you tell me. Was there secrecy behind James the Lodger's leaving? There is secrecy everywhere. Silence and secrecy. That's how it seems. I walk into a room and a hush falls on it and I know they've been talking about my mother. And I am not allowed to speak of her. What happens if you do? I don't know because I never test the rule. Why not? The music is central. I have my music. I still have my music. My father, my grandparents, Sarah-Jane, and Raphael. Even Calvin the Lodger. We all have my music. Is this rule stated? The rule about not asking after your mother? Or is it implied? It must be ... I don't know. She's not there to greet us when we return from Austria. She's gone but no one acknowledges that fact. The house has been wiped so clean of her that it's as if she never lived there in the first place. And no one says a word. They don't pretend she's taken a trip somewhere. They don't pretend she's suddenly died. They don't pretend she ran off with another man. They act as if she never existed. And life goes on. You never asked about her? I must have known that she was one of the subjects that we just didn't talk about. One? There were others? Perhaps I didn't miss her. I don't actually recall missing her. I don't even remember much about what she looked like. Except that her hair was blonde and she covered it with head scarves, the sort you always see the Queen wearing. But this would have been in church. And yes, I do remember being with her in church. I remember her crying. Crying in church at morning mass with the nuns lined up in the first few pews of that chapel of theirs in Kensington Square. They're on the other side of this rood screen affair, the nuns, except it's not really a rood screen but more like a fence to keep a separation between them and the rest of the public except there's no one else there to be the rest of the public at early morning Mass. There's just Mother and I. And the nuns are in front in those special pews giving responses, and one of them is dressed in that old way, in a habit, but all the rest are done up normally but very plain and with crosses on their chests. And during Mass, my mother kneels, always kneels, with her head resting on her hands. She weeps the whole time. And I don't know what to do. Why is she weeping? you want to know, of course. She is always weeping, it seems. And this one nun the one dressed in the old way comes up to Mother after communion but before the end of Mass and she takes us both to a sitting room of some kind in the convent next door and there she and Mother talk. They sit in one corner of the room. I am in the other corner, the far corner, where I've been given a book to read and told to sit. I'm impatient to be back home, though, because Raphael's assigned me a set of exercises to master and if I master them to his liking, we're to go to the Festival Hall as a reward. A concert. Ilya Kaler will be performing. He is not yet twenty years old but already he has won the Grand Prize at the Genoa Paganini Competition and I want to hear him because I intend to be far greater than Ilya Kaler. How old are you? you want to know. I must be six. Seven at the oldest. And I am impatient to go home. So I leave my corner and I approach my mother and I pull on her sleeve and say, "Mum. I'm bored," because that's what I always say, that's how I communicate. Not: I've got to practise, Mum. But: I'm bored and it's your duty as my mother to deal with my boredom. But Sister Cecilia and yes, that's her name, I've remembered her name! disengages my hand from my mother's sleeve and leads me back to the corner and says, "You'll be staying right here till you're called for, Gideon and no nonsense about it' and I'm surprised because no one ever talks to me that way. I'm the prodigy, after all. I am if there can be degrees of it more unique than anyone within my universe. The surprise of being disciplined in such a way and by such a woman in such a costume is perhaps what keeps me in my corner for another few minutes as Sister Cecilia and my mother huddle together at their end of the room. But then I begin kicking at a bookshelf to entertain myself and I kick too hard and books topple to the floor and a statue of the Virgin falls and breaks on the lino. We leave soon afterwards, my mother and I. I excel at my lesson that morning. Raphael takes me to the concert as he's promised. He's arranged for me to meet Ilya Kaler and I've brought my violin and we play together. Kaler is brilliant, but I know I'll exceed what he has accomplished. Even then, I know this. And what happens to your mother? you ask. She spends much of her time upstairs. In her bedroom? No. No. In the nursery. In the nursery. Why? And I know the answer. I know the answer. Where has it been for all these years? Why have I suddenly remembered now? My mother's with Sonia. 8 SEPTEMBER There are gaps, Dr. Rose. They exist in my brain like a series of canvases painted by an artist but incomplete and coloured only black. Sonia is part of one of those canvases. I remember the fact of her now: that there was a Sonia, and that she was my younger sister. She died at a very early age. I remember this as well. So that would be why my mother was weeping all those mornings at early Mass. And Sonia's death must have been one of the subjects we did not speak about. To speak about her death would be to bring on a new torrent of Mother's terrible grieving and we wished to spare her that. I've been trying to conjure up a picture of Sonia, but nothing is there. Just the black canvas. And when I try to summon her up to take part in a specific memory Christmas, for instance, or Guy Fawkes Night, or the annual taxi ride with Gran to Fortnum and Mason for a birthday lunch in the Fountain .. . anything .. . anything at all.. . nothing is there. I don't even remember the day that she died. Nor do I recall her funeral. I know just the fact that she died because suddenly she wasn't there any longer. Just like your mother, Gideon? you ask me. No. This is different. This must be different because this feels different. And all I know for certain is that she was my sister, that she died young. Then Mother was gone. Whether she left us soon after Sonia died or whether it was months or years later, I couldn't say. But why? Why can't I remember my sister? What happened to her? What do children die of: cancer, leukaemia, cystic fibrosis, scarlet fever, influenza, pneumonia .. . what else? This is the second child to die, you point out to me. What? What do you mean? The second child? The second child of your father's to die, Gideon. You've told me about Virginia .. . ? Children die, Dr. Rose. That's what happens sometimes. Every day of the week. Children fall ill. Children just die. Chapter Three "I don't really see how the caterer managed to cope in here, do you?" Frances Webberly asked. "Of course, it's quite good enough for us, this kitchen. I can't see that we'd actually use a dishwasher or a microwave even if we had one. But caterers .. . They're used to all the mod cons, aren't they? What a surprise it must have been for the poor woman to arrive and find us living practically in the Middle Ages." At the table, Malcolm Webberly made no reply. He'd heard his wife's deliberately cheerful words, but his mind was elsewhere. To deflect a potential conversation that he didn't want to have with anyone, he'd set about polishing his shoes in the kitchen. He assumed that Frances, having known him for more than thirty years and thus being well aware of his aversion to doing two things at once, would see him at this modest industry and leave him to himself. He very much wanted to be left to himself. He'd wanted that from the instant he'd heard Eric Leach say, "Male, sorry it's so late, but I've got some news," and go on to tell him of Eugenie Davies' death. He needed the time alone to sort through his feelings, and while a sleepless night with his wife snoring lightly beside him had given him a number of hours to consider how the words hit and run actually affected him, he'd found that all he'd been able to do was to picture Eugenie Davies as he'd last seen her: with the river wind tossing her bright blonde hair. She'd covered that hair with a scarf the moment she'd stepped from her cottage, but during their walk the scarf had loosened and it was while she removed it, refolded it, and replaced it on her head that the wind flicked locks of hair round her shoulders. Quickly, he'd said to her, "Why not leave it off? The light in your hair makes you look .. ." What? Beautiful? he'd wondered. But she'd never been a great beauty in all the years that he'd known her. Young? They were both a decade past their prime. He'd supposed the word he wanted was actually peaceful. The sunlight in her hair made an aureole round her head, which reminded him of seraphim, which spoke of peace. But as those thoughts came to him, he'd become conscious of the fact that he'd never seen Eugenie Davies truly at peace and that at the moment -despite that trick of the halo created by light and wind she was not at peace still. These thoughts in his mind once again, Webberly smeared polish industriously on his shoe. As he did so, he became aware that his wife was still talking to him. '.. . a lovely job, though. But thank heavens it was dark when the poor woman arrived because Lord knows how she would have functioned had she got a good look at our garden." Frances laughed ruefully. "I'm still holding out for my pond and my lilies," I told our Lady Hillier last night. She and Sir David are actually thinking of putting a Jacuzzi in their conservatory. Did you know? I told her a conservatory Jacuzzi is perfectly well and good if you like that sort of thing, but as for me, a little pond is all I've ever wanted. "And we'll have it someday," I told her. "Malcolm says we'll have it, so we will." Naturally, we'll have to find someone to scythe through the weeds and cart off that old lawn mower out there, but I didn't mention that to our Lady Hillier ' Your sister Laura, Webberly thought. ' as she'd hardly understand what I was talking about. She's had that gardener of hers since ... I don't know how long. But when the time's right and the money's there, you and I will have our little pond, won't we?" "I expect so," Webberly said. Frances eased behind the table in the cramped little kitchen and gazed from the window into the garden. She'd stood there so often in the past ten years that she'd worn a shoe-sized place in the lino, and there were finger grooves in the window sill where she'd spent hours clutching onto the wood. What did she think as she stood there hour after hour every day? her husband wondered. What did she try and fail to do? A moment later he had his answer: "The day looks quite fine," she told him. "Radio One claimed there's going to be more rain by this afternoon, but I think they've got it wrong. You know, I believe I'll go out and do some work in the garden this morning." Webberly looked up. Frances, apparently feeling his eyes on her, swung round from the window, one hand still on the sill and the other tight on the lapel of her dressing gown. "I think I can do it today," she said. "Malcolm, I think I can do it." How many times had she said that before? Webberly wondered. One hundred? One thousand? And always with that same mixture of hope and delusion. She was going to work in the garden, Malcolm, she was going to walk to the shops this afternoon, she would definitely sit on a bench in Prebend Gardens or take Alfie for a romp or try the new beautician that was so well-spoken of.. so many good and honest intentions coming to naught at the final moment when the front door stood implacably in front of Frances and, try as she might and God knows she tried, she couldn't force her right hand up far enough to grasp onto the knob. Webberly said, "Frannie ' She cut in anxiously. "It's the party that's made all the difference. Having our friends in ... being surrounded like that. I feel as right as ... well, as right as can be." Miranda's appearance at the kitchen door saved Webberly from having to reply. With an "Ah. Here you are," she dropped her trumpet case onto the floor along with a weighty rucksack, and she went to the cooker where Alfie the family's Alsatian mix was having alengthy post-party lie in on his blanket. She gave the dog a brisk rub between his ears, which he responded to by rolling over and offering his stomach for her ministrations. She cooperated, pausing to plant a kiss on his head and to accept a wet dog kiss in return. "Darling, that's terribly unhygienic," Frances said. "That's doggy love," Miranda replied. "Which, as we know, is the purest kind. Isn't it, Alf!" Alfie yawned. Miranda said, over her shoulder to her parents, "I'm off then. I've two papers to hand in next week." "So soon?" Webberly set his shoes to one side. "We've had you barely forty-eight hours. Cambridge can wait another day, can't it?" "Duty calls, Dad. Not to mention the odd exam or two. You still want me to try for a first, I take it?" "Hang on, then. Let me finish with these shoes and I'll drive you up to King's Cross." "No need. I'll go by tube." "Then I'll run you up to the underground." "Dad." Her voice was a model of patience. They'd walked this path often in her twenty-two years, so she was well-used to its twists and turns. "I need the exercise. Explain it to him, Mum." Webberly protested. "But if it begins to rain on your way ' "Heavens, Malcolm, she's not going to melt." But they do, Webberly countered, in his mind. They melt, they break, they disappear in an instant. And always when melting, breaking, or disappearing is the very last possibility in your head. Still, he knew the wisdom of compromise in a situation in which two females were beginning to join forces against him. So he said, "I'll walk a bit with you, then." And he added, "Alf needs his morning toddle, Randie," when Miranda rolled her eyes and looked ready to remonstrate against the idea of a father chaperoning his adult daughter down the street in broad daylight as if she were incapable of using a zebra crossing on her own. "Mum?" Miranda glanced at her mother for support. Frances said with a regretful shrug, "You've not taken Alfie yet yourself, have you, darling?" Miranda surrendered with good-natured exasperation. "Oh, come along then, you twit. But I'm not waiting for the shoe polish routine to be done." "I'll see to the shoes," Frances said. Webberly fetched the dog's lead and followed his daughter out of the house. Outside, Alfie rooted an old tennis ball from the shrubbery. He knew the routine when Webberly was on the other end of the lead: It would be a stroll to Prebend Gardens, where his master would unhook the lead from his collar and throw the tennis ball across the grass, whereupon Alfie would dash after it, refuse to return it, and run wildly around for at least quarter of an hour. "I don't know who has less imagination," Miranda said as she watched the dog snuffle through the hydrangeas, 'you or the dog. Just look at him, Dad. He knows what's up. There's not the least bit of surprise in store for him." "Dogs like routine," Webberly told her as Alfie emerged triumphant, a hairy old ball in his jaws. "Dogs, yes. But what about you? Do you always take him to the gardens, for God's sake?" "It's my walking meditation twice a day," he told her. "Morning and night. Won't that do?" "Walking meditation," she scoffed. "Dad, you're such a fibber. Really." They set off to the right once beyond the front gate, following the dog to the end of Palgrave Street, where he made the expected left turn that would take them up to Stamford Brook Road and Prebend Gardens that lay just on the other side of it. "It was a good party," Miranda said, linking her arm through her father's. "Mum seemed to like it. And no one mentioned ... or wondered ... at least not to me .. ." "It was fine," Webberly said, squeezing his arm to his side to hold her closer. "Your mother enjoyed herself so much she was talking about working in the garden today." He felt his daughter looking at him but he kept his own eyes resolutely forward. Miranda said, "She won't. You know she won't. Dad, why don't you insist she go back to that doctor? There's help for people like Mum." "I can't force her to do more." "No. But you could .. ." Miranda sighed. "I don't know. Something. Something. I don't understand why you won't take a stand, why you've never taken a stand with Mum." "What d'you have in mind?" "If she thought you meant to ... well, if you said, "This is it, Frances. I'm at my limit. I want you to go back to that psychiatrist or else." "Or else? What?" He could feel her deflate. "Yes. That's just it, isn't it? I know you'd never leave her. Well, of course, how could you and live with yourself? But there's got to be something you we haven't thought of yet." And then apparently to spare him from having to answer, she noted that Alfie was eyeing a cat up ahead of them with too much interest. She took the lead from her father and said, "Don't even think of it, Alfred," with a little jerk. At the corner, they crossed and there they parted fondly, Miranda heading to the left which would ultimately take her in the direction of Stamford Brook underground station and Webberly striding onward along the green iron railing that formed the east boundary of Prebend Gardens. Inside the wrought iron gate, Webberly took the dog off his lead and wrested the tennis ball from his jaws. He flung it as far as he could down the length of the green and watched as Alfie raced after it. Once the ball was in the dog's possession, Alfie did his usual: He loped to the far end of the lawn and began to race round the perimeter of the green. Webberly watched his progress from bench to bush to tree to path, but he himself remained where they'd entered, moving only to the paint-chipped black bench a short distance from the notice board on which announcements of coming events in the community were posted. These he read without actually assimilating them: Christmas fetes, antiques fairs, and car boot sales. He noted with approval that the phone number of the local police station was prominently displayed and that a committee hoping to organise a Neighbourhood Watch programme was going to assemble in the basement of one of the churches. He saw all this but he couldn't have testified to any of it later. Because although he perceived those six or seven pieces of paper pinned behind the glass of the notice board, and although he went through the motions of reading each one of them, what he actually observed was Frances standing at the kitchen window while his daughter said kindly and with absolute faith in him, Of course you'd never leave her.. . How could you? That last especially seemed to reverberate round his skull like an echo with a killing sense of irony. How could you leave her, Malcolm Webberly? Indeed, indeed, how could you leave her? Leaving Frances had been the last thing on his mind that night he'd got the call to go to Kensington Square. The call had come via the Earl's Court Road station where he was a recently promoted detective inspector with a newly assigned sergeant Eric Leach as his partner. Leach did the driving down Kensington High Street, which in those days was moderately less jammed than it tended to be now. Leach was new to the borough, so they overshot the mark and ended up winding through Thackery Street, with its small-village feel so at odds with a huge city, and coming into the square from its southeast end. This put them directly in front of the house they were seeking: a red brick Victorian affair with a white medallion at the gable's peak giving the date of construction: 1879, relatively new in an area where the oldest building had been erected nearly two hundred years earlier. A panda car, a tandem arrival at the scene along with the ambulance men when the emergency call had first come through, still sat at the kerb although its lights were no longer flashing. The ambulance men themselves were long since gone as were the neighbours who had doubtless assembled as neighbours will do when sirens scream into a residential area. Webberly shoved open his door and walked to the house, where a low brick wall surmounted by black wrought iron fenced in a flag stone area with a central planter. An ornamental cherry tree grew there, and at that time of year it created a roseate blossom pool on the ground. The front door was closed, but someone inside must have been waiting for them because no sooner had Webberly put his foot on the bottom step than the door swung open and the uniformed constable who'd placed the call to the station admitted them into the house. He looked shaken. This was his first call to a child's death, he told them. He'd arrived in the wake of the ambulance. "Two years old," he informed them in a hollow voice. "Dad's been giving her kiss of life and the medics tried everything they could." He shook his head, looking stricken. "No chance. She was gone. Sorry, sir. I've a baby at home. Makes you think .. ." "Right," Webberly said. "It's okay, son. I've a little one myself." He needed no reminding how fleeting life was, how vigilant a parent needed to be against anything that might snuff that life out. His own Miranda had just turned two. "Where'd it happen?" Webberly asked. "In the bath. Upstairs. But don't you want to talk to .. . ? The family're in the drawing room." Webberly didn't need a young PC to tell him his business, but the boy was rattled, so there was no point sorting him out right then. He looked at Leach instead. "Tell them we'll be with them shortly. Then .. ." He jerked his head towards the stairs. He said to the constable, "Show me," and he followed him up a staircase that curved round an ornate oak plant stand from which an enormous fern drooped fronds towards the floor. The nursery bathroom was on the second floor of the house along with the nursery, a loo, and another bedroom that was occupied by the other child In the family. The parents and grandparents had rooms just below on the first floor. The top floor was occupied by the nanny, a lodger, and a woman who .. . well, the constable supposed she'd be called a governess although the family didn't call her that. "She teaches the children," the constable said. "Well, perhaps just the older one, I expect." Webberly raised his eyebrows at the oddity of a governess in this day and age, and he went into the bathroom where the tragedy had occurred. Leach joined him there, his duty done in the drawing room below. The constable returned to his post by the front door. The two detectives surveyed the bathroom somberly. It was a mundane location for sudden death to make its mark. And yet it happened so often that Webberly wondered when people would finally learn not to leave a child unattended for even a second when it came to so much as an inch of water anywhere. There was more than an inch of water in the tub, however. At least ten inches remained inside, cool now and with a plastic boat and five yellow ducklings floating motionless on its surface. A bar of soap rested on the bottom near the drain, and a stainless steel bath tray with worn rubber ends bridged the width of the tub and held a limp flannel, a comb, and a sponge. All of it looked perfectly normal. But there was also an indication that both panic and tragedy had been recent visitors to the room. To one side, a towel rack lay overturned on the floor. A soaked bath mat was crumpled beneath a wash basin. A rattan wastepaper basket had been caved in. And across the white tiles were the footprints of the paramedics whose last concern would have been to keep the room neat and tidy as they attempted to revive a child. Webberly could picture the scene as if he'd been there because he had been there before while on uniformed patrol: no panic among the medics but rather intense and what seemed like inhumanly impersonal calm; checks for pulse and respiration, for reaction from the pupils, the immediate initiation of CPR. They would know she was dead within moments but they would not say those words to anyone because their job was life, life at any cost, life at every cost, and they would work upon the child and whisk her from the house and continue to work upon her all the way to the hospital because there was always the chance that life could be wrung from the limp taller that remained when the spirit left the body. Webberly squatted by the wastepaper basket and used a pen to right it, having a look inside. Six crumpled tissues, perhaps half a yard of dental floss, a flattened tube of toothpaste. He said to Leach, "Check the medicine cabinet, Eric," while he himself went back to the tub and looked long and hard round its sides, round its taps and its spigot, along the grout that edged it, and into its water. Nothing. Leach said, "Baby aspirin in here, cough syrup, some prescriptions. Five of them, sir." "For who?" "Made out for Sonia Davies." "Note them all, then. Seal off the room. I'll speak to the family." But it was more than the family he met in the drawing room because more than the family lived in the house, and more than only the house's inhabitants had been present when the tragedy supervened in their evening rituals. Indeed, the drawing room seemed to be bursting with people although there were but nine individuals present: eight adults and a small boy with an appealing fall of white blond hair across his forehead. Chalky-faced, he stood in the protective circle of the arm of an old man who was, presumably, his grandfather and whose necktie a souvenir of some college or club by the look of it the boy grasped and twisted in his fingers. No one spoke. They looked in shock, and they seemed to be grouped to offer each other what support they could. Most of this was being directed at the mother, who was sitting in one corner of the room, a woman in her thirties like Webberly himself, but whey of complexion with large eyes that were haunted and seeing again and again what no mother ever ought to see: her child's limp body in the hands of strangers who fought to save her. When Webberly introduced himself, one of the two men who were hovering near the mother rose and said he was Richard Davies, the father of the child who'd been taken to hospital. The use of the euphemism was clear when he gave a glance in the direction of the little boy, his son. Wisely, he didn't wish to speak of the other child's death in front of her brother. He said, "We were at the hospital. My wife and I. They told us ' At this a young woman seated on a sofa accompanied by a man of her own age with his arm round her shoulders began to cry. It was a horrible, guttural weeping that grew to the sort of sobs that lead to hysteria. "I do not leave her," she keened, and even through her lamentation Webberly could hear her heavy German accent. "I swear to God almighty that I do not leave her for even a minute." Which begged the question of how she had died, of course. They all needed to be interviewed, but not simultaneously. Webberly said to the German girl, "You were responsible for the child?" At which the mother said, "I brought this down upon us." "Eugenie!" Richard Davies cried, and the other man who'd been hovering over her, his face shining with a patina of sweat, said, "Don't talk like that, Eugenie." The grandfather said, "We all know who's at fault." The German girl wailed, "No! No! No! I do not leave her!" while her companion held her and said, "It's okay," which it patently was not. Two people said nothing: an elderly woman who kept her eyes glued onto Granddad and a tomato-haired woman in a neat pleated skirt who watched the German girl with undisguised dislike. Too many people, too much emotion, growing confusion. Webberly told them all to disperse, save the parents. Remain in the house, he directed them. And someone stay with the little boy. "I'll do that," Tomato-hair said, obviously the 'governess' about whom the young PC had spoken. "Come along, Gideon. Let's have a look at your maths." "But I'm to practise," the boy said, looking earnestly from one adult to another. "Raphael did tell me ' "Gideon, it's all right. Go with Sarah-Jane." The sweat-faced man left the mother's side, going to squat before the little boy. "You're not to worry about your music just now. Go with Sarah-Jane, all right?" "Come along, lad." Grandfather stood, the little boy in his arms. The rest of the group followed him from the room till only the parents of the dead child remained. Even now in the garden in Stamford Brook, with Alfie barking at the birds and chasing the squirrels and waiting for his master to call him back to the lead, Webberly could see Eugenie Davies as she had been on that long ago evening. Dressed simply in grey trousers and a pale blue blouse, she didn't move an inch. She didn't look at him or at her husband. She only said, "Oh my God. What's to become of us?" And even then she spoke to herself, not to the men. Her husband said, but rather to Webberly and not in answer to her, "We went to the hospital. There was nothing they could do. They didn't tell us that here. At the house. They didn't tell us." "No," Webberly said. "That's not their job. They leave that to the doctors." "But they knew. While they were here. They knew then, didn't they?" "I expect so. I'm sorry." Neither of them wept. They would, later, when they realised that the nightmare they were currently experiencing was no nightmare at all but rather an extended reality that would colour what remained of their lives. But at the moment, they were dull with trauma: the initial panic, the crisis of frantic intervention, the invasion of strangers into their home, the agonising wait in a casualty ward, the approach of a doctor whose expression undoubtedly had said it all. "They talked about releasing her later. The .. . her body," Richard Davies said. "He said we couldn't take her, couldn't make any arrangements .. . Why?" Eugenie's head lowered. A tear dropped onto her folded hands. Webberly drew a chair over so that he was on the same level as Eugenie and he nodded to Richard Davies to sit as well, which he did, next to his wife whose hand he took. Webberly explained to them as best he could: When an unexpected death occurred, when someone died who was not under the care of a physician who could sign a death certificate, when someone died in an accident like a drowning then a post mortem examination was required by law. Eugenie looked up. "Are you saying they'll cut her up? Cut her open?" Webberly skirted the question by saying, "They'll determine the exact cause of her death." "But we know the cause," Richard Davies said. "She .. . My God, she was in the bath. And then there was shouting, the women screaming. I ran upstairs and James came tearing down from ' "James?" "He lodges with us. He was in his room. He came running." "Where was everyone else?" Richard looked to his wife for some sort of answer. She shook her head, saying only, "Mother Davies and I were in the kitchen, starting dinner. It was Sonia's bath time and .. ." She hesitated, as if saying her daughter's name made more real what she could not bear to think about. "And you don't know where everyone else was?" Richard Davies spoke. "Dad and I were in his sitting room. We were watching that .. . God, that infernal, stupid football game. We were actually watching football while Sosy was drowning upstairs." It seemed the diminutive form of their daughter's name was what broke Eugenie. She finally began to weep in earnest. Richard Davies, caught up in his own grief and despair, didn't take his wife into his arms as Webberly would have had him do. He merely said her name, telling her uselessly that it was all right, that the baby was with God who loved her as much as they did. And Eugenie herself above all people knew that, didn't she, she whose faith in God and God's goodness was absolute? Cold comfort, that, Webberly thought. He said, "I'll want to talk to everyone else, Mr. and Mrs. Davies." And then to Richard Davies alone, "She might need a doctor," in reference to his wife. "Better phone him." The drawing room door opened as he spoke and DS Leach entered. He nodded to indicate he'd completed his list and sealed the bathroom off, and Webberly told him to set up the drawing room to conduct interviews with the residents of the house. "Thank you for helping us, Inspector," Eugenie said. Thank you for helping us. Webberly thought about those words now as he lumbered to his feet. How curious it was that five simple words spoken in such a wretched voice had actually managed to transform his life: from detective to knight errant in the space of a single second. It was because of the kind of mother she was, he told himself now as he called to Alfie. The kind of mother that Frances God forgive her could never have hoped to be. How could anyone help admiring that? How could any man help wanting to be of service to such a mother? "Alfie, come!" he shouted as the Alsatian loped after a terrier with a Frisbee in his mouth. "Home. Come. We won't use the lead." As if the dog actually understood this last promise, he dashed back to Webberly. He'd had an excellent run this morning, if his heaving sides and his dangling tongue were any indication. Webberly nodded towards the gate and the dog walked to it and sat obediently, eyes on Webberly's pockets for a treat to reward him for such a display of good manners. "You'll have to wait till we get home," Webberly told him and afterwards considered his own words. Indeed, that's the way life played out, didn't it? At the end of the day and for too many years, everything that mattered in Webberly's sorry little world had found itself put off till he got home. Lynley noted that Helen hadn't taken more than a mouthful of tea. She'd changed her position in bed, however, and she was observing him make a mess of his tie while he was watching her in the mirror. "So she's someone Malcolm Webberly knew?" Helen asked. "How dreadful for him, Tommy. And on his anniversary night." "I wouldn't go so far as to say he knew her," Lynley replied. "She was one of the principals in the first case he ran as a DI over in Kensington." "That would have been years ago, then. It must have made an enormous impression on him." "I dare say it did." Lynley didn't want to tell her why. Indeed, he didn't want to tell her anything else about that long ago death that Webberly had investigated. The drowning of a child was horrific enough to contemplate under any circumstances, but under these newly changed circumstances in their lives, it seemed to Lynley that a certain amount of discretion and delicacy was going to be in order now that his wife was carrying a child of her own. A child of our own, he corrected his thinking, a child to whom no harm would ever come. So elaborating on the harm that had befallen another child seemed like tempting fate. At least that was what Lynley told himself as he went about the rituals of dressing. In bed, Helen turned on her side, away from him, her knees drawn up and an extra pillow bunched into her stomach. "Oh Lord," she moaned. Lynley went to her, sat on the edge of the bed, and smoothed her chestnut hair. "You've not touched much of your tea," he said. "Would you like something different this morning?" "I'd like to stop feeling so wretched." "What does the doctor say?" "She's a fount of wisdom on that front: "I spent the first four months of every pregnancy embracing the bowl of the loo. It'll pass, Mrs. Lynley. It always does." "Till then?" "Think positive thoughts, I suppose. Just don't make them of food." Lynley studied her fondly: the curve of her cheek and the way her ear lay like a perfect shell against her head. There was a greenish cast to her skin, though, and the way she was clutching onto the pillow suggested another round of sickness was fast on its way. He said, "I wish I could do this for you, Helen." She laughed weakly. "That's just the sort of thing men say out of guilt when they know very well that the last thing on earth they would ever choose to do is to have a baby for anyone." She reached for his hand. "I do appreciate the thought, though. Are you off, then? You will have breakfast, won't you, Tommy?" He assured her that he would have a meal. Indeed, he knew there was no escape from it. If Helen wasn't insisting upon his eating, then Charlie Denton manservant, housekeeper, cook, valet, aspiring thespian, unrepentant Don Juan, or whatever else he was choosing to call himself on a given day would bar the door until Lynley had downed a plate of something. "What about you?" he asked his wife. "What d'you have on? Are you working today?" "Frankly, I wish not, because I'd like to remain immobile for the next thirty-two weeks." "Shall I phone Simon, then?" "No. He's got that acrylamide business to sort out. They need it in two days." "Yes, I see. But does he need you?" Simon Allcourt-St. James was a forensic scientist, an expert witness whose speciali ties took him into the witness box regularly to confirm the Crown Prosecution's evidence or to bolster the position of the defence. In this particular instance, he was working on a civil case in which the litigation involved determining how much acrylamide absorbed through the skin constituted a toxic dose. "I like to think so," she replied. "And anyway .. ." She gazed at him, a smile curving her mouth. "I'd like to tell him our news. I told Barbara last night, by the way." "Ah." "Ah? Tommy, what's that supposed to mean?" Lynley rose from the bed. He went to the wardrobe where the mirrored door illustrated the disaster he'd created with his tie. He unknotted it and began again. "You did tell Barbara that no one else knows, didn't you, Helen?" Across from him, she struggled to sit up. The movement cost her, however, and she quickly sank back. "I told her that, yes. But now that she knows, I think we may as well tell ' "I'd rather not just yet." The tie looked worse than the first time round. Lynley gave up on the effort, blamed it on the material, and fetched another. He was aware that Helen was watching him, and he knew she expected some very sound reasoning behind his decision. He said, "Superstition, darling. If we keep it to ourselves, there's less chance something might go wrong. It's silly, I know. But there you have it. I hadn't thought to tell anyone till .. . well, I guess till it took." "Till it took." She repeated the phrase thoughtfully. "Are you worried, then?" "Yes. Worried. Terrified. Nervous. Apprehensive. Preoccupied. And frequently incoherent. That's about it." She smiled gently. "I love you, darling." And that smile asked for a further admission. He owed her that much. "There's also Deborah to consider," Lynley said. "Simon'll be able to cope with the news, but it's going to hurt Deborah like the devil when you tell her you're pregnant." Deborah was Simon's wife, a young woman with so many miscarriages to her name that it seemed like a deliberate act of cruelty to mention a successful pregnancy in her hearing. Not that she wouldn't feign joy for the couple. Not that she wouldn't feel that joy at some level. But at a deeper level where her own hopes lay, she would feel the hot brand of failure scorch the skin of dreams, and that skin had been scorched enough times already. "Tommy," Helen said kindly, "Deborah's going to find out eventually. How much more hurtful is it going to be if she suddenly realises I've switched to maternity clothes without mentioning the fact that we're having a baby? She'll know why we haven't told her at that point. Don't you think that will hurt her even more?" "I'm not suggesting we let it go that long," Lynley said. "Just for a while, Helen. For luck, actually, more than for Deborah. Will you do this for me?" Helen studied him as he'd studied her. He felt himself chafing under her scrutiny, but he didn't turn from it, waiting for her answer. She said, "Are you happy about this baby, darling? Are you truly happy?" "Helen, I'm delighted." But even as he spoke, Lynley wondered why he did not feel that way. He wondered why what he actually felt was a duty he'd long left undone. Chapter Four Jill Foster was grunting through the final series of pelvic tilts with her antenatal trainer counting them when Richard came into the flat. He looked more haggard than she'd expected, and she didn't like the way this made her feel. He'd been divorced from Eugenie for sixteen years. As far as she could see, the identification of his former wife's body should merely be an inconvenient exercise undertaken as a helpful member of society doing his duty to assist the police. Gladys, the antenatal trainer whom Jill had come to think of as a cross between an Olympic athlete and a fitness Nazi, said, "Ten more, Jill. Come along, now. You'll thank me when you're in labour, luv." Jill grunted, "Can't." "Nonsense. Take your mind off exhaustion. Think of that dress instead. You'll thank me at the end of the day. Do ten more." The dress in question was a wedding gown, a Knightsbridge creation that had cost a small fortune and that hung from the sitting room door, where Jill had placed it to give her inspiration when the hungries came upon her and when the fitness Nazi was taking her through her sweating, miserable, and embarrassing paces. I'm sending you Gladys Smiley, darling," Jill's mother had announced upon being told of the grandchild to come. "She's the best antenatal specialist in the south and that's including London, mind you. She's generally booked up, but she'll fit you in for me. Exercise is crucial. Exercise and diet, of course." Jill had cooperated with her mother, not because Dora Foster was her mother but because she'd delivered five hundred babies at five hundred successful home births. So she knew what she was talking about. Gladys counted down from ten. Jill was sweating like a race horse and feeling like a sow, but she managed a glowing smile for Richard. He'd argued against what he'd called 'the unique absurdity' of Gladys Smiley from the first, and he was still standing firm against the idea of Dora Foster delivering her first granddaughter at the family home in Wiltshire. But since Jill had compromised on the wedding agreeing to the more modern approach of postnatal connubiality rather than what she would have preferred: engagement, marriage, and childbirth in that order she knew that Richard was ultimately going to have to give in to her desires. She was the one giving birth, after all. And if she wanted her mother to deliver her her mother with thirty years of experience doing just that then that's the way it was going to be. "You're not my husband yet, darling," Jill informed him pleasantly each time he protested. "I haven't yet said a word in front of anyone about loving, honouring, and obeying you." She had him there, and she knew it. So did he. Which was why she was going to have her way in the end. "Four .. . three .. . two .. . one .. . Yes!" Gladys cried. "Excellent work. You keep this up and that little one'll slide right out of you. See if she doesn't." She handed Jill a towel and nodded at Richard, where he stood in the doorway, looking grey round the mouth. "Settled on a name, then, have you?" "Catherine Ann," Jill said firmly as Richard said just as firmly, "Cara Ann." Gladys looked from one to the other, saying, "Yes. Well. Keep up the good work, Jilly. I'll see you day after tomorrow, yes? Same time?" "Hmm." Jill remained on the floor as Richard saw Gladys out of the flat. She was still there feeling like a beached whale when he came back into the sitting room. She said, "Darling, there is no way on earth that I'm naming a child Cara. I'd be the laughing stock of every one of my friends. Cara indeed. Honestly, Richard. She's a child, not a character in a romance novel." In the normal course of events, he'd have argued. He'd have said, "Catherine is far too ordinary, so if it's not to be Cara, then it's not to be Catherine, and we'll have to compromise on something else." Which was what they'd been doing since the day that they'd met when she'd found herself going head to head with the man during a documentary the BBC had been filming about his son. "You may speak to Gideon about his music," Richard Davies had informed her during the contract negotiations. "You may question him about the violin. But my son does not discuss his personal life or his history with the media, and I insist upon making that perfectly clear." Because he doesn't have a personal life, Jill thought now. And what went for his history could have been summed up in four syllables: the violin. Gideon was music and music was Gideon. So it had been and always would be. Richard, on the other hand, was electricity itself. She'd liked matching wits and battling wills with him. She'd found that appealing and sexy, despite the enormous gap in their ages. Arguing with a man was such an aphrodisiac. And so few men in Jill's life were actually willing to argue. Especially English men, who generally decomposed into passive-aggression at the first sign of a row. Arguing, however, was not what Richard had in mind at the moment: arguing about the name of their daughter, the location of the freehold they had yet to purchase, the choice of wallpaper once that freehold was theirs, or the size and the date of their future wedding. All those had been subjects of past rows between them, but she could see he hadn't the heart for a heated discussion now. His colourless face was an advertisement for what he'd undergone in the past few hours, and despite the fact that his clinging to the idea of Cara was rather more maddening than she'd anticipated it might be when he first suggested the name five months ago, Jill wanted to appear sympathetic to his recent experiences. No matter that she felt like saying, "What on earth's wrong? For God's sake, Richard, the beastly woman walked out on you nearly twenty years ago." She knew the wisdom of saying instead, "Was it bad, darling? Are you quite all right?" in the gentlest of tones. Richard went to the sofa and sat, his scoliosis looking worse for the dejection that drooped his shoulders. He said, "I couldn't tell them." She frowned. Couldn't tell them .. . ? "What, darling?" "Eugenie. I couldn't tell them if the woman was actually Eugenie." "Oh." In a small voice. Then, "She'd changed that much? Well, I suppose it's not that odd, is it, Richard? So long since you've seen her. And perhaps she's had a rough time .. ." He shook his head. He dug two fingers into his eyebrows and rubbed. "It isn't that, although I couldn't have told them even if it was." "Then what?" "She was hit quite badly. They wouldn't say exactly what happened, even if they knew. But she looked as if a lorry had run over her. She was .. . she was mangled, Jill." "My God." Jill struggled into a sitting position. She put a supportive hand on his knee. This was something to go all grey in the face about. "Richard, I'm so terribly sorry. What an ordeal for you." "They showed me a Polaroid first, which was good of them. But when I couldn't identify her from that, they showed me her body. They asked if there were distinguishing marks somewhere on her that might identify her. But I couldn't remember." His voice was dull, like an old copper coin. "All I could tell them was the name of her dentist twenty years ago and think of that, Jill. I could remember the name of her dentist but not if she had a birthmark somewhere that might tell the police that she is -that she was Eugenie, my wife." Former wife, Jill wanted to add. Deserting wife. Wife who selfishly left behind a child whom you raised to adulthood alone. Alone, Richard. Let's not forget that. "But I could remember the name of her bloody dentist," he was saying. "And only because he's mine as well." "What will they do?" "Use the x-rays to make sure it's Eugenie." "What do you think?" He looked up. He seemed so tired. With an unaccustomed sense of guilt, Jill thought of how little sleep he was managing to get on her sofa and how kind and solicitous it was of him to stay the nights with her now when her time was drawing near. Since Richard had already had two children although only one of them was actually still alive Jill hadn't honestly expected him to be as lovingly concerned for her welfare as he'd been during most of the pregnancy. But from the moment her stomach had started to swell and her breasts had begun to grow heavier, he'd treated her with a tenderness she'd found rather poignant. It served to open her heart to him and to bind them more closely together. This unit they were forming was something she warmed to. It's what she'd longed for and dreamed of having and despaired of finding among men her own age. "What I think," Richard said in answer to her question, 'is that the likelihood of Eugenie's having had the same dentist since our marriage ended ' Since she deserted you, Jill corrected him silently. ' is fairly remote." "I still don't understand how they connected you with her. And how they tracked you down." Richard stirred on the sofa. In front of him on the large plump ottoman that served as a coffee table, he fingered the latest copy of Radio Times. Its cover featured a toothy American actress who'd agreed to simulate what would undoubtably be a wildly imperfect English accent so she could play the part of Jane Eyre in yet another resurrection of that eponymous and utterly implausible Victorian melodrama. Jane Eyre indeed, Jill thought with a scoff, she who fostered within the soft brains of more than one hundred years of mentally pliable female readers the nonsensical belief that a man with a past as dark as licorice could be elevated by the love of a decent woman. What utter nonsense. Richard wasn't answering. Jill said, "Richard, I don't understand. How did they connect you with Eugenie? I realise she must have kept your surname, but Davies isn't so uncommon that one would make the leap that you and she had once been married." "One of the police on the scene," Richard said. "He knew who she was. Because of the case .. ." He aimlessly shifted the copy of Radio Times so that the one beneath it was on top. This one pictured Jill herself in modern garb among the costumed cast of her triumphant production of Desperate Remedies, filmed within weeks of Jill's final breakup with Jonathon Stewart, whose passionate vows to leave his wife 'once our Steph has finished up at Oxford, darling' had proved to be just about as steadfast as his performance in bed had been reliable. Two weeks after 'our Steph' had her diploma in her grubby little grasp, Jonathon was making another excuse which involved settling the wretched girl 'in her new digs up in Lancaster, darling'. Three days later Jill had pulled the plug on their relationship and buried herself in Desperate Remedies, whose title couldn't have been more appropriate to her emotional state at the time. Jill said, "The case?" and a moment later realised what case he was speaking about. The case, of course, the only one that mattered. The case that had broken his heart, destroyed his marriage, and coloured the last two decades of his life. She said, "Yes, I suppose the police might remember." "He was involved. One of the detectives. So when he saw her name on her driving licence, he tracked me down." "Yes. I see." She half-rolled into a kneeling position from which she was able to touch his curved shoulder. "Let me make you something. Tea, coffee." "I could do with a brandy." She lifted an eyebrow although since he was looking at the magazine cover and not at her, he didn't see the action. She wanted to say, At this hour? Surely not, darling. But she heaved herself to her feet and went to the kitchen where she took a bottle of Courvoisier from one of the sleek cupboards and poured him an exact two tablespoons, which seemed an adequate amount to restore him. He joined her in the kitchen and took the glass without comment. He drank a sip and swirled the remaining liquid in the glass. He said, "I can't get the sight of her out of my mind." This seemed too much to Jill. All right, the woman was dead. And yes, she'd died in a dreadful way, with much to be pitied. Indeed, it was a grim affair, having to look upon her broken body. But Richard hadn't had a single word from his former wife in nearly two decades, so why would he be so distraught at her death? Unless he was still carrying a torch for her .. . Unless, perhaps, he'd not been quite truthful about the death of their marriage and what he'd done with the corpse. Jill said with care and placing a loving hand on his forearm, "I know this must be a terrible time for you. But you've not actually.. . seen her in all these years, have you?" A flicker in his eyes. Of their own accord, her fingers tightened. Don't make this into a Jonathon situation, she told him silently. Lie to me now, and I will end this, Richard. I will not live in a fantasy again. He said, "No, I've not seen her. But I've spoken to her recently. A number of times in the last month or so." He seemed to feel the shield she put up to protect her heart from damage at this piece of news because he went on quickly. "She phoned me because of Gideon. She'd read about what happened at Wigmore Hall. When he didn't recover from that.. . situation .. . quickly, she phoned to ask me about him. I haven't told you because ... I don't actually know why I haven't told you. It didn't seem very important at the time. And beyond that, I didn't want anything to upset you in these final weeks .. . the baby. It hardly seemed fair to you." "That's completely outrageous." Jill felt a swelling of righteous anger. Richard said, "I'm sorry. We spoke for only five minutes .. . ten minutes at the most each time she phoned. I didn't consider ' "I don't mean that," Jill interrupted. "I don't mean it's outrageous that you didn't tell me. But that she phoned you at all. That she had the audacity to phone you, Richard. That she could walk out of your life -out of Gideon's life, for God's sake and then phone up when she reads about him because she's curious that he's had a bit of trouble at a performance. My God, what cheek." Richard said nothing in reply to this. He merely swirled the brandy round in his glass and observed the thin patina it left on the sides. There was something more here, Jill concluded. She said, "Richard? What is it? There's something you're not telling me, isn't there?" And she felt once again a basic shutting down when confronted with the idea that a man with whom she was so intimately involved might not be as forthcoming as she required of him. Odd, she thought, how one humiliating and disastrous relationship had the potential to affect every involvement that followed it. "Richard? Tell me. Is there something more?" "Gideon," Richard said. "I didn't tell him that she'd been phoning me about him. I didn't know what to tell him, Jill. It's not as if she was asking to see him because she wasn't asking to see him at all. So what would have been the point? But now she's dead and he's got to be told about that and I'm terrified that hearing it is going to make him take a turn for the worse." "Yes. I can see how it could." '"Is he well?" she wanted to know, Jill. "Why isn't he playing, Richard?" she asked. "How many concert engagements has he actually broken? And why? Why?" ' "What was she after?" "She must have phoned me a dozen times in the last two weeks alone," Richard said. "There she was, this voice from the past which I thought I'd bloody well recovered from and He stopped himself. Jill felt the chill. It started from her ankles and swept up quickly to close round her heart. She said carefully, "Thought you'd recovered?" and tried to stop herself from thinking what she couldn't bear to think but the words ricocheted round her head anyway: He still loves her. She walked out on him. She disappeared from his life. But he continued to love her. He climbed into my bed. He joined his body to mine. But all the time he was loving Eugenie. No wonder he'd never remarried. The only question was: Why was he remarrying now? The damn man read her mind. Or perhaps her face. Or maybe he felt the chill as well since he said, "Because it took me that much time to find you, Jill. Because I love you. Because at my age, I never expected to love again. And every morning when I awake, even on that miserable sofa of yours, I thank God for the miracle that you love me. Eugenie is a distant part of my past. Let's not make her part of our future." And the truth of it was, as Jill knew well, that they both had pasts. They were not adolescents, so neither of them could expect the other to come into their new life unburdened. The future was what was important, at the end of the day. Their future and the future of the baby. Catherine Anne. Henley-on-Thames was easily accessible from London, especially when the morning commute along the M40 created tailbacks that extended in the opposite direction only. So DI Thomas Lynley and DC Barbara Havers were rolling south in the direction of Henley from Marlow just under an hour after having left Eric Leach's incident room in Hampstead. DCI Leach, fighting off either a head cold or flu, had introduced them to a squad of detectives who, while slightly leery of the presence of New Scotland Yard among them, also seemed willing to accept their participation in a work load that currently included a series of rapes on Hampstead Heath and an arson in the Grade II listed cottage of an ageing actress of both title and considerable reputation. Leach detailed the preliminary findings from the post mortem examination first, pending blood, tissue, and organ analysis, and they amounted to a multitude of injuries on a body that had ultimately been identified through dental records as belonging to one Eugenie Davies, aged sixty-two. First came the fractures she had sustained: the fourth and fifth cervical vertebrae, the left femur, ulna, and radius, the right clavicle, and the fifth and sixth ribs. Then came the internal ruptures: liver, spleen, and kidneys. The cause of death had been determined as massive internal haemorrhaging and shock, and the time had been set between ten o'clock and midnight. An evaluation of trace evidence on the body would be forthcoming. "She was thrown about fifty feet," Leach told the detectives assembled in the incident room as they stood among the computers, the china boards, the filing cabinets, the copy machines, and the photographs. "According to forensic she was then driven over at least twice, possibly three times, as indicated by contusions on the body and markings left on her mac." A general murmur greeted this remark. Someone said, "Nice neighbourhood, that' with heavy irony. Leach corrected the DC's misapprehension. "We're assuming a single car, not three, did the damage, McKnight. We'll maintain that position till we hear otherwise from Lambeth. One hit from the vehicle put her flat out on the pavement. Then once over her, once in reverse, and back again." Leach indicated several pictures on the china board before he went on. They depicted the street as it had been in the aftermath of the hit and run. He gestured to one in particular showing a section of tarmac photographed between two orange traffic cones with a line of cars along the pavement in the background. "The point of impact appeared to be here," he said. "And the body landed here, square in the centre of the road." Another set of traffic cones, plus a large rectangle of the street taped off. "The rain took care of some of the blood that would have been where the body landed. But it wasn't raining hard enough to carry away all the blood from the site or the tissue and bone fragments either. However, the body's not where the tissue and bone are. Instead, it's over here next to this Vauxhall at the kerb. And notice how she's tucked a bit under it? We reckon that our driver, having knocked her down and having done his bit of back and forming over her body, then got out of his car, dragged the woman to one side, and drove off." "She couldn't have been dragged beneath a set of wheels? Lorry, perhaps?" The question came from a DC who was noisily eating from a cup of instant noodles. "Why rule that out?" "Nature of what few tyre marks we've got," Leach informed him, reaching for his coffee, which he'd left on a nearby desk heaped with files and computer print-outs. He was more loosely strung than Lynley had expected upon their first introduction not forty minutes earlier in his office. Lynley took this as a good sign of what it was going to be like working with the DCI. "But why not three cars, sir?" one of the other DCs asked. "The first knocks her down, drives off in a panic. She's wearing black so the next two don't even see her lying in the road and run over her before they know what's happened." Leach took a gulp of coffee and shook his head. "You won't find anyone giving you good odds on our having three conscienceless citizens all in the same neighbourhood on the same night running over the same body and not one of them reporting it. And nothing in your scenario explains how the hell she ended up part way under that Vauxhall. Only one explanation does that, Potashnik, and it's why we're the ones looking at the situation." There was a murmur of agreement at this. "I'd put good money on the bloke who reported it being the driver we're looking for," someone from the back of the room called out. "Pitchley pulled in a brief and put in the plug straightaway," Leach acknowledged, 'and that bears the stench of manure, you're right. But I don't think we've heard the last from him, and that car of his is going to be what unseals his lips, make no mistake." "Pinch a bloke's Boxster and he'll sing "God Save the Queen" on demand," a DC at the front pointed out. "That's what I'm relying on," Leach agreed. "I'm not saying he's the driver who did her in in the first place, and I'm not saying he's not. But no matter which way the wind's blowing, he won't be getting that Porsche off us till we know why the dead woman had his address on her. If it takes holding the Porsche to shake the information from him, then holding the Porsche and going over it six times with granny's Hoover is exactly what's going to happen. Now .. ." Leach went on to make the action assignments, most of which put his team into the street where the hit and run had occurred. It was lined with houses some conversions and some individual homes and the DCs were to get a statement from everyone in the area about what had been seen, heard, smelled, or dreamed about on the previous night. His directions allocated other DCs to dog the forensic lab: some of them monitoring the progress made on the examination of Eugenie Davies' car, others given the responsibility for pulling together all the information regarding trace evidence on the woman's body, still others matching the trace evidence from the body to the Boxster that the police had impounded. This same group would be evaluating all tyre prints left in the West Hampstead street and on Eugenie Davies' body and her clothes. A final group of constables the largest was assigned to search for a car with damage to its front end. "Body shops, car parks, car hire firms, streets, mewses, and lay-bys on the motorway," Leach informed them. "You don't run down a woman in the street and drive away with no damage." "That does put the Boxster out of the running," a female DC noted. "Possession of the Boxster's how we prise information from our man," Leach said. "But there's no telling if and where this bloke Pitchley might have himself another car stowed away. And we'd be wise not to forget that." The meeting concluded, Leach met with Lynley and Havers privately in his office. As their superior officer of record, he gave Lynley and Havers instructions in a manner that suggested more than mere homicide if that were not already enough was involved in the case. But what that more was, he didn't mention. He merely handed over Eugenie Davies' address in Henley-on-Thames, telling them that the house was their starting point. He assumed, he told them pointedly, that they had enough experience between them to know what to do with what they found there. "What the hell was that supposed to mean?" Barbara asked now as they swung into Bell Street in Henley-on-Thames where school children were taking their morning exercise in a local playground. "And why've we been given the house while the rest of that lot are beating the pavement from West Hampstead to the river? I don't get it." "Webberly wants us involved. Hillier's given his blessing." "And that's reason enough to do some serious tip-toeing, if you ask me." Lynley didn't disagree. Hillier had no love for either of them. And Webberly's state of mind on the previous evening had suggested a few things but declared nothing. "I expect we'll sort things out soon enough, Havers. What's the address again?" "Sixty-five Friday Street," she said and with a glance at their street map, "Take a left here, sir." Sixty-five turned out to be a dwelling seven buildings up from the River Thames on a pleasant street that mixed residences with a veterinarian's surgery, a book shop, a dental clinic, and the Royal Marine Reserve. It was the smallest house that Lynley had ever seen bar his own companion constable's tiny dwelling in London that often struck him as fit for Bilbo Baggins and no one else. It was painted pink and it consisted of two floors and a possible attic if the microscopic dormer window on the roof was any indication. It bore an enamel plaque which named it, appropriately, Doll Cottage. Lynley parked a short distance away from it, across the street from the book shop. He fished the dead woman's set of keys from his pocket while Havers took the opportunity to light up and fortify her bloodstream with nicotine. "When are you going to drop that loathsome habit?" he asked her as he checked the front of the house for an alarm system and put the key in the lock. Havers inhaled deeply and offered him her most maddening smile of tobacco-induced pleasure. "Listen to him," she said to the sky. "There may be something more obnoxious than a reformed smoker, but I don't know what it is. Child pornographer come to Jesus on the day of his arrest? Tory with a social conscience perhaps? Hmm. No. They don't quite match up." Lynley chuckled. "Put it out in the street, Constable." "I wouldn't even dwell on another option." She flicked the cigarette over her shoulder, after taking another three hits. Lynley opened the door, which admitted them into a sitting room. This looked about as large as a shopping trolley, and it was furnished with near monastic simplicity and with a taste that veered towards Oxfam rejects. "And I thought I'd achieved drab-with-a-vengeance," Havers remarked. It wasn't an inappropriate description, Lynley thought. The furniture was of post war vintage, crafted at a period when rebuilding a capital devastated by bombing had taken precedence over interior design. A threadbare grey sofa accompanied by a matching armchair of an equally disenchanting hue sat against one wall. They formed a little seating area round a blond-wood coffee table spread with magazines and two similar end tables, both of which someone had attempted unsuccessfully to refinish. Three lamps in the room all sported tassled shades, two of them askew and the third bearing a large burn that could have been turned to the wall but wasn't. Nothing save a single print above the sofa, featuring an unattractive Victorian-era child with her arms round a rabbit, decorated the walls. On either side of a mouse hole fireplace, fitted shelves held books, but they were spottily placed here and there, and it seemed as if something had stood among them but had been removed. "Bloody poverty-stricken," Havers said in assessment. She was, Lynley saw, fingering through the magazines on the coffee table, her hands -latex gloved fanning the publications out so even Lynley could see from his place by the bookshelves that they all bore pictorial covers that placed them years out of date. Havers moved into the kitchen that lay just beyond the sitting room as Lynley turned to look at the bookshelves. She called out, "One mod con in here. She's got an answer machine, Inspector. Light's blinking." "Play it," Lynley said. The first disembodied voice floated from the kitchen as Lynley took his reading spectacles from his jacket pocket in order to examine more closely the few volumes on the fitted bookshelves. A man's deep and sonorous voice said, "Eugenie. Ian," as Lynley picked up a book called The Little Flower and opened it to see it was a biography of a Catholic saint called Therese: French, from a family of daughters, a cloistered nun, suffered an early death from whatever one would contract living in a cell with no heating in France in midwinter. "I'm sorry about the row," the voice continued from the kitchen. "Phone me, will you? Please? I've got the mobile with me," and he followed this declaration with a number that began with a recognisable prefix. "Got it," Havers called out from the kitchen. "It's a Cellnet number," Lynley said and picked up the next book as the next voice this one a woman's left her message, saying, "Eugenie, it's Lynn. Dearest, thank you so much for the call. I was out for a walk when you rang. It was so very kind of you. I hardly expected .. . Well. Yes. There it is. I'm just about coping. Thanks for asking. If you ring me back, I'll give you an update. But I expect you know what I'm going through." Lynley saw he was holding another biography, this one of a saint called Clare, an early follower of St. Francis of Assisi: gave away all she owned, founded an order of nuns, lived a life of chastity and died in poverty. He picked up a third book. "Eugenie," another man's voice from the kitchen, but this one distraught and obviously familiar to the dead woman since he spoke without attribution, saying, "I need to speak to you. I had to ring again. I know you're there, so will you pick up the phone? .. . Eugenie, pick up the God damn phone." A sigh. "Look. Did you actually expect me to be happy about this turn of events? How could I be? .. . Pick up the phone, Eugenie." A silence was followed by another sigh. "All right. Fine. If that's how you're going to play it. Flush history down the lavatory and get on with things. I'll do the same." The phone banged down. "That sounds like a decent field to plough," Barbara called. "Hit one-four-seven-one at the end of the messages and pray for good luck." The third book, Lynley saw, detailed the life of St. Teresa of Avila, and a quick examination of its jacket was enough to inform him that thematic unity was being achieved on the bookshelves: the convent, poverty, an unpleasant death. Lynley read this and frowned thoughtfully. Another man's voice, again without attribution, came from the answer machine in the kitchen. He said, "Hullo, darling. Still asleep or are you out already? I'm just ringing about tonight. The time? I've a bottle of claret that I'll bring along if that suits. Just let me know. I'm .. . I'm very keen to see you, Eugenie." "That's it," Havers said. "Fingers crossed, Inspector?" "Metaphorically," he replied as in the kitchen Havers punched in 1471 to trace whoever had made the most recent call to Eugenie Davies' home. As she did so, Lynley saw that the rest of the books on the shelves were also biographies of Catholic saints, all of them female. None of them were recently published, most of them were at least thirty years old, and some of them had been printed prior to World War II. Eleven of them had the name Eugenie Victoria Staines inscribed on their fly leaves in a youthful hand; four of them were stamped Convent of the Immaculate Conception, and five others bore the inscription To Eugenie, with fondest regards from Cecilia. Out of one of this last group the life of someone called Saint Rita a small envelope fell. It bore no postmark or address, but the single sheet of paper had been dated nineteen years earlier in a beautifully schooled hand that had also written: Dearest Eugenie, You must try not to give in to despair. We can none of us understand God's ways. We can only live through the trials He chooses for us to endure, knowing that there is a purpose behind them which we may not be able to understand at the time. But we will understand eventually, dear friend. You must believe that. We deeply miss you at morning Mass and all of us hope that you will return to us soon. With Christ's love and my own, Eugenie, Cecilia Lynley returned the paper to its envelope and snapped the book closed. He called out, "Convent of the Immaculate Conception, Havers." "Are you recommending a lifestyle change for me, sir?" "Only if it suits you. In the meantime, make a note to track down the convent. We want someone called Cecilia if she's still alive, and I've a feeling that's where we might find her." "Right." Lynley joined her in the kitchen. The simplicity of the sitting room was repeated there. The kitchen hadn't been updated in several generations, by the look of it, and the only appliance that could be said to be remotely modern was the refrigerator although even it appeared to be at least fifteen years old. The answer machine was sitting on a narrow wooden work top. Next to it stood a papier mache holder containing several envelopes. Lynley picked these up as Havers went over to a small table and two chairs that abutted one of the walls. Lynley glanced over to see that the table was set not for a meal but for an exhibition: Three neat lines of four framed photographs apiece stood upon it as if for inspection. Envelopes in hand, Lynley went to Havers' side as she said, "Her kids, d'you think, Inspector?" Every photograph indeed depicted the same subjects: two children who advanced in age in each picture. They began with a small boy -perhaps five years old holding an infant who, in later pictures, turned out to be a little girl. From first to last, the boy looked desperately eager to please, wide-eyed and smiling so broadly and anxiously that every tooth in his mouth was on display. The little girl, on the other hand, seemed mostly unaware that a camera was focused on her at all. She looked right, she looked left, she looked up, she looked down. Only once with her brother's hand on her cheek had anyone managed to get her to look into the camera. Havers said in her usual blunt fashion, "Sir, doesn't it look like there's something wrong with this kid? And she's the one that died, right? The one the superintendent told you about? This is her, right?" "We'll need someone to confirm it," Lynley replied. "She could be someone else. A niece. A grandchild." "But what d'you think? "I think yes," Lynley said. "I think she's the child who died." Drowned, he thought, drowned in what could have gone down as an accident but instead turned into something far more. The photo must have been taken not long before she died. Webberly had told him that the girl had died at two, and Lynley saw that she couldn't have been much less than that at the time of this final picture. But Webberly hadn't told him everything, he realised as he studied the photo. He felt his guard go up and his suspicions heighten. And he didn't much like either one of those sensations. Chapter Five Major Ted Wiley didn't think in terms of the police when the silver Bentley pulled to the kerb across the street from his book shop. He was in the middle of ringing up a purchase at the till for a youthful housewife with a sleeping toddler in a push chair, and rather than concentrate on the presence of a luxury vehicle in Friday Street during non-Regatta season, he instead engaged the youthful housewife in conversation. She'd bought four books by Dahl, which clearly were not intended for herself, so it appeared she was one of the few modern young parents who understood the importance of introducing a child to reading. Along with the insidious dangers of cigarette smoking, this was one of Ted's favourite topics. He and his wife had read to all three of their girls not that there had been a surfeit of other nighttime activities for children to engage in in Rhodesia all those years ago and he liked to think that the early start which he and Connie had given to them resulted in everything from respect for the written word to a determination to attend first class universities. So seeing a young mother in possession of a stack of children's books delighted Ted. Had she herself been read to as a child? he wanted to know. What were the little one's favourites? Wasn't it astonishing how quickly children attached themselves to a story they'd been read, demanding it over and over again? Thus, Ted saw the silver Bentley only out of the corner of his eye. He gave it little thought other than, Fine motor, that. It was only when the car's occupants got out and approached Eugenie's house that he bade a friendly farewell to his customer and moved closer to the window to watch them. They were an odd pair. The man was tall, athletically built, blond and admirably dressed in the sort of well-made suit that ages over time like a fine wine. His companion wore red trainers, black trousers, and an overlarge navy donkey jacket that hung to her knees. The woman lit up a fag before she had the car door closed, which made Ted's lip curl in distaste the world's tobacco manufacturers were surely going to burn for eternity in a section of hell designed just for them but the man walked straight to Eugenie's door. Ted waited for him to knock, but he didn't. As his companion sucked at her cigarette like someone with a death wish, the man examined an object in his hand, which turned out to be a key to Eugenie's front door, because he inserted this key in the lock and after making a remark to his companion, they both went inside. At this sight, Ted went numb from his feet to his earlobes. First that unfamiliar man at one in the morning, then last night's encounter between Eugenie and that same individual in the car park, and now these two strangers in possession of a key to the cottage .. . Ted knew he had to get over there at once. He glanced round the shop to see if any more customers were considering purchases. There were two others. Old Mr. Horsham -Ted liked to call him Old Mr. Horsham because it was such a relief to find someone out and about who was older than himself- had taken a volume about Egypt off the shelf and appeared to be weighing it rather than inspecting it. And Mrs. Dilday was, as usual, reading another chapter from a book she had no intention of purchasing. Part of her daily ritual was to select a bestseller, carry it casually to the back of the shop where the arm chairs were, read a chapter or two, mark her place with a grocery receipt, and hide the book among second hand volumes of Salman Rushdie where considering the tastes of the average citizen in Henley -it would not be noticed. For nearly twenty minutes Ted waited for these two customers to remove themselves from the premises so that he could invent a reason to go across the road. When old Horsham finally bought Egypt for a gratifying sum, saying "Saw action there in the war," as he handed over two twenty-pound notes which he extricated from a wallet that looked old enough to have seen action with its owner, Ted then turned his hopes towards Mrs. Dilday. But this, he saw, was going to be fruitless. She was firmly ensconced in her favourite overstuffed armchair, and she'd brought a Thermos of tea with her as well. She was pouring, sipping, and reading quite happily, just as if she were in her own home. Public libraries exist for a reason, Ted wanted to tell her. But instead he alternated between watching her, sending her mental messages about leaving at once, and peering out of the window for any kind of indication of who the people were in Eugenie's house. In the midst of his mental imaging of Mrs. Dilday actually purchasing her novel and trotting off to read it, the telephone rang. His eyes still on Eugenie's house, Ted felt behind him for the receiver and picked it up on the fifth double ring. He said, "Wiley's Books," and a woman asked, "Who's this speaking, please?" He said, "Major Ted Wiley. Retired. Who's this?" "Are you the only person who uses this line, sir?" "What .. . ? Is this BT? Is there a problem?" "Your phone number registers on one-four-seven-one as the last to have called this number that I'm speaking from, sir. It belongs to a woman called Eugenie Davies." "Right. I phoned her this morning," Ted informed his caller, trying to keep his voice as steady as he could. "We've a dinner engagement." And then because he had to ask it although he already knew the answer, "Is something wrong? Has something happened? Who are you?" The receiver at the other end was covered for a moment as the woman spoke to someone else in the room. She said, "Metropolitan police, sir." Metropolitan .. . that meant London. And suddenly Ted could see it again: Eugenie driving into London last night with the rain beating down against the roof of the Polo and the spray from the tyres arcing out into the road. "London police?" he asked nonetheless. "That's right," the woman told him. "Where are you, exactly, sir?" "Across from Eugenie's house. I've a book shop .. ." Another consultation. Then, "Would you mind stepping over here, sir? We've one or two questions we'd like to ask you." "Has something ..." Ted could barely force himself to say the words, but they had to be said. If nothing else, the police would expect to hear them. "Has something happened to Eugenie?" "We can come to you if that's more convenient." "No. No. I'll be there at once. I must close up first, but I'll "Fine, Major Wiley. We'll be here for quite some time." Ted walked to the back of the shop where he told Mrs. Dilday that an emergency required him to shut up shop for a time. She said, "Dear me. I hope it's not your mum?" because that was indeed the most rational emergency: his mother's death, although at eighty-nine it was only the stroke that was preventing her from taking up kick-boxing in her declining years. He said, "No, no. Just .. . There's something I need to take care of." She peered at him intently but accepted the vague excuse. In a welter of nerves, Ted waited as she drank down the rest of her tea, donned her wool coat, thrust her hands into her gloves, and without the least attempt to disguise her actions put the novel she was reading behind a copy of The Satanic Verses. Once she was gone, Ted hurried up the stairs to his flat. He found that his heart was alternately fluttering then pounding, and he was becoming rather light-headed. With the lightness came voices, so real that he swung round without thinking, anticipating a presence that was not there. First the woman's voice again: "Metropolitan police. We've one or two questions we'd like to ask .. ." Then Eugenie's: "We'll talk. There's so much to say." And then, unaccountably, his own Connie's murmur coming to him from the grave itself, Connie who'd known him as no one else had: "You're a match for any man alive, Ted Wiley." Why now? he wondered. Why Connie now? But there was no answer, only the question. And there was also what had to be faced and dealt with across the street. As Lynley began going through the letters he'd pulled from the papier-mache holder, Barbara Havers went up the narrowest staircase she'd ever seen to the first floor of the tiny house. There, two very small bedrooms and an antiquated bathroom opened off a landing that wasn't much larger than a drawing pin's head. Both bedrooms continued the theme of monastic simplicity bordering on shabbiness that began in the sitting room below. The first room contained three pieces of furniture: a single bed covered by a plain counterpane, a chest of drawers, and a bedside table on which stood yet another tassled lamp. The second bedroom had been turned into a sewing room and contained, aside from the answer machine, the only remotely modern appliance in the entire building: an advanced sewing machine next to which lay a considerable pile of tiny garments. Barbara fingered through these and saw that they were dolls' clothes, elaborately designed and more elaborately fashioned with everything from beadwork to faux fur. There were no dolls anywhere in the sewing room nor were there any in the bedroom next door. There Barbara went first to a chest of drawers where she found a humble paucity of clothing, even by her own indifferent standards of dress: threadbare knickers, equally worn brassieres, a few jumpers, a limp collection of tights. There was neither a fitted clothes cupboard nor a wardrobe in the room, so the few skirts, trousers, and dresses that the woman had owned were folded carefully into the chest of drawers as well. Among the trousers and the skirts, at the back of the drawer, Barbara saw that a bundle of letters had been tucked. She fished these out, removed the rubber band that held them together, laid them out across the single bed, and saw that they had all been written in the same hand. She blinked at this hand. She took a moment to assimilate the fact that she recognised the black, decisive scrawl. The envelopes bore postmarks as old as seventeen years. The most recent, she saw, had been sent just over one decade ago. She reached for this one and slid the contents out. He called her "Eugenie my darling." He wrote that he didn't know where to begin. He said those things that men always say when they claim to have reached the decision that they no doubt intended to reach all along: She must never doubt that he loved her more than life itself; she must know, remember, and hold to her heart the fact that the hours they had spent together had made him feel alive truly and wonderfully alive, my darling for the first time in years; indeed, the feeling of her skin beneath his fingers had been like liquid silk shot through with lightning .. . Barbara rolled her eyes at the purple phrasing. She lowered the letter and gave herself a moment to react to it and, more important, to what it implied. Read more or not, Barb? she asked herself. Read more and she felt unclean. Not and she felt unprofessional. She went back to the letter. He'd gone home, she read, intending to tell his wife everything. He'd screwed his courage to the sticking place -Barbara winced at the pilfering from Shakespeare and held the image of Eugenie in his mind to give him the strength to deal a mortal blow to a perfectly good and decent woman. But he'd found her unwell, Eugenie darling, unwell in a manner that he couldn't explain in a mere letter, but that he would explain, would lay before her in all its desperate detail, when next they met. This didn't mean they would not be together at the end of the day, darling Eugenie. This didn't mean they had no future. Above all, this didn't mean everything that had passed between them counted for nothing, because that was not the case. He'd concluded with, "Wait for me. I beg you. I'm coming to you, darling." And he'd signed it with the scrawl that Barbara had seen on notes, on Christmas cards, on departmental letters, and on memos for years. At least she now knew what had seemed off at the Webberly party, she thought as she stuffed the letter back into its envelope. All that jolly-good-fell owing to celebrate twenty-five years of sham. "Havers?" Lynley was in the doorway, spectacles sliding down his nose and a greeting card in his hand. "Here's something that fits in with one of the phone messages. What've you found?" "Swap," she said and handed over her envelope in exchange for what he was carrying. This card was from someone called Lynn, with an envelope that bore a London postmark but no sender's address. Its message was simple: Thankyou so much for the floral tribute, dearest Eugenie, and for your presence which meant so much to me. Life will go on. I know that. But, of course, it will never be the same. Fondly, Lynn. Barbara examined the date: a week ago. She agreed with Lynley. Thematically, it sounded like the same woman who'd left the message on the answer machine. "Damn." This was Lynley's reaction to the letter Barbara had handed to him. He gestured to the other letters that lay across Eugenie Davies' bed. "What about those?" "All from him, Inspector, if the writing on the envelopes is anything to go by." Barbara watched the play of reactions as they crossed Lynley's face. She knew that her superior officer and she had to be thinking along the same lines: Had Webberly known these letters so embarrassing and potentially damaging to him would be in Eugenie Davies' possession? Had he merely suspected or feared that they might be? And in either case, had he arranged to have Lynley and by extension Havers as well work the case in order to run interference no matter which circumstance arose? "D'you think Leach knows about them?" Barbara asked. "He phoned Webberly when he had a potential i.d. on the body. At one in the morning, Havers. What does that suggest to you?" "And guess who he asked to go to Henley this morning." Barbara took the letter that Lynley handed back to her. "What's to do, then, sir?" Lynley walked to the window. She watched as he gazed down at the street. She expected the regulation reply from him. Asking the question in the first place had been merely rote. "We'll take them with us," he said. She got to her feet. "You've got evidence bags in the boot, haven't you? I'll fetch ' "Not like that," Lynley said. Barbara said, "What? But you just said take ' "Yes. We'll take them with us." He turned back to her from the window. Barbara stared at him. She didn't want to think what he was implying. We'll take them with us. Not, We'll bag them and log them as evidence, Havers. Not, Be careful with them, Barbara. Not, We'll have forensic check them for fingerprints, for the prints of someone other than the recipient who might have found them, might have read them, might have become consumed with jealousy because of them and despite their age, someone who might have looked for vengeance because of them .. . She said, "Hang on, Inspector. You can't mean ' But she wasn't able to complete her protest. Below them, someone knocked on the door. it Lynley answered it to find an elderly gentleman in a waxed jacket and peaked cap standing on the pavement, his hands sunk into his pockets. His ruddy face was mapped with the markings of broken capillaries, and his nose was just that shade of rose that would grow purple over time. But it was his eyes that Lynley took note of most closely. They were blue, intense, and wary. He introduced himself as Major Ted Wiley, army, retired. "Someone from the police .. . You must be one of them. I had a call .. . ?" Lynley asked the man to step inside. He introduced himself and then introduced Havers who descended the stairs as Wiley moved tentatively into the room. The old gentleman looked round him, glanced at the stairs, then lifted his eyes to the ceiling as if he were trying to determine what Barbara Havers had been looking for or had found on the floor above. "What's happened?" Wiley removed neither his hat nor his jacket. "You're a friend of Mrs. Davies?" Lynley asked him. The man didn't respond at once. It was as if he were trying to decide what the word friend actually meant in reference to his relationship with Eugenie Davies. He finally said, looking from Lynley to Havers and back again to Lynley, "Something's happened to her. You wouldn't be here otherwise." "That was you on the phone, that last message on her machine? A man talking about plans for tonight?" Havers asked this. She remained by the stairs. "We were .. ." Wiley seemed to hear the past tense and made the adjustment. "We're supposed to have dinner. Tonight. She said .. . You're from the Met and she went to London last night. So something's happened to her. Please tell me what." "Sit down, Major Wiley," Lynley said. The old man didn't seem frail, but there was no telling the condition of his heart or his blood pressure from just one look at him, and Lynley didn't like to take risks with someone when he had bad news to pass on. "It was raining hard last night," Wiley said, more to himself than to either Lynley or Havers. "I talked to her about driving in the rain. And the dark. Dark's bad enough but rain makes it worse." Havers crossed the few feet to Wiley and took him by the arm. "Have a seat, Major," she said. "It's bad," he responded. "I'm afraid so," Lynley said. "The motorway? She said she'd be careful. She said not to worry. She said we'd talk. Tonight. We'd talk. She wanted to talk." He was speaking not so much to them but to the coffee table in front of the sofa on which Havers had deposited him. She sat next to him, perched on the edge. Lynley took the armchair. He said gently, "I'm afraid Eugenie Davies was killed last night." Wiley turned his head to Lynley in a what looked like slow motion. "The motorway," he said. "The rain. I didn't want her to go." For the moment, Lynley didn't disabuse him of the notion that there had been a motorway crash. The BBC early morning news had carried the story of the hit and run, but no mention had been made of Eugenie Davies' name at that time since her body had yet to be identified and her family had yet to be tracked down. He said, "She left after dark, then? What time was this?" Wiley said numbly, "Half past nine, I think? Ten? We were walking back from St. Mary the Virgin ' "Evensong?" Havers had taken out her notebook and was jotting down the information. "No, no," Wiley said. "There was no service. She'd gone in ... to pray? I don't actually know because .. ." He removed his cap then, as if he were in church himself. He held it with both hands. "I didn't go in with her. I had my dog. My golden. PB? That's her name. We waited in the churchyard." "This was in the rain?" Lynley asked. Wiley twisted the cap. "Dogs don't mind rain. And it was time for her last walk of the evening. PB's last walk." Lynley said, "Can you tell us why she was going to London?" Wiley gave the cap another twist. "She said she had an appointment there." "With whom? Where?" "I don't know. She said we'd talk tonight." "About the appointment?" "I don't know. God. I don't know." His voice fractured but Ted Wiley wasn't a retired Army man for nothing. He regained control within a second. Then he said, "How did it happen? Where? Did she skid? Hit a lorry?" Lynley gave the facts to him, offering just enough details to tell Wiley where and how she had died. He didn't use the word murder in his explanation. And Wiley didn't interrupt to ask why the Metropolitan police were trolling through the belongings of a woman who, to all intents and purposes, was the victim of a simple hit and run. But a moment after Lynley had finished his explanation, Wiley made the leap. He seemed to take measure of the fact that Havers had descended the stairs upon his arrival, wearing latex gloves. He put this together with the police punching one-four-seven-one on Eugenia's phone. He added to this what they had said about Eugenie's answer machine. And he said, "This can't have been an accident. Because why would you .. . the two of you coming out here from London .. ." His eyes focused on something else, perhaps someone else, a vision in the distance that seemed to prompt him to say, "That bloke in the car park last night. This isn't an accident, is it?" And he rose. Havers rose as well and urged him back down. He cooperated, but now he was changed, as if an unnamed purpose had begun to consume him. From twisting his cap, he went to slapping it against his palm. He said, quite as if he were giving an order to a subordinate, "Tell me what happened to Eugenie." There seemed little risk that he would have a heart attack or stroke, so Lynley told him that he and Havers were part of a murder squad, leaving him to fill in the rest of the blanks. He went on to say, "Tell us about the man in the car park," which Wiley did without hesitation. He'd walked up to the Sixty Plus Club where Eugenie worked. He went with PB to walk Eugenie home in the rain. When he got there, he observed her in an altercation with a man. Not a local man, Wiley said. This was someone from Brighton. "She told you that?" Lynley asked. Wiley shook his head. He'd got a glimpse of the number plate as the car sped off. He couldn't get it all, but he saw the letters: ADY. "I was worried about her. She'd been acting a little peculiar for several days, so I looked the letters up in the registration mark guide. I saw ADY is Brighton. The car was an Audi. Navy or black. I couldn't tell in the dark." "You keep a copy handy?" Havers asked. "The registration mark guide? Is this a hobby or something?" "It's in the book shop. Travel section. I sell a copy now and then. People who want to give their kids something to do in the car. That sort of thing." "Ah." Lynley knew Havers' ah. She was watching Wiley curiously. He said, "You didn't intercede in the altercation between Mrs. Davies and this man, Major Wiley?" "I came into the car park only at the end of it. I heard a few shouted words on his part, this was. He got into the car. Took off before I was close enough to say anything. That was it." "Who did Mrs. Davies say this man was?" "I didn't ask her." Lynley and Havers exchanged a look. Havers was the one to ask, "Why not?" "As I said. She'd been acting peculiar, different from usual, for several days. I assumed there was something on her mind and .. ." Wiley shifted his eyes to his cap, and seemed surprised to find it still in his hands. He stuffed it into his pocket. "See here. I'm not the sort who pries. I decided to wait for her to tell me whatever she wanted to tell me." "Had you ever seen this man before?" Wiley said no, no, he didn't know the man. He hadn't seen him before that moment, but he'd got a good look at him if the detectives wanted a description. When they said that they did, he provided it: the approximate age, the height, the iron grey hair, the dominant hawk-like nose. "He called her Eugenie," Wiley concluded. "They knew each other." This, he said, he'd assumed from what he'd seen in the car park: Eugenie had touched the man's face, but he'd pulled away. "But you still didn't ask her who he was?" Lynley said. "Why was that, Major Wiley?" "It seemed .. . too personal, somehow. I thought she'd tell me when she was ready. If he was important." "And she did say she had something she wanted to talk to you about," Havers noted. Wiley nodded and let out a slow breath. "She did say that. She talked about confessing her sins." "Sins," Havers said. Lynley leaned forward, avoiding Havers' meaningful look in his direction. He said, "May we assume from all this that you and Mrs. Davies had a close relationship, Major Wiley? Were you friends? Lovers? Engaged?" The question seemed to discomfit Wiley. He altered his position on the sofa. "It'd been three years. I wanted to be respectful with her, not like one of these randy modern blokes with nothing more on his mind. I was willing to wait. She finally said that she was ready, but she wanted to have a talk first." "Which was what was supposed to happen tonight," Havers concluded. "That's why you phoned her." It was. Lynley asked the old gentleman to come into the kitchen with them, then. He said that there were other voices on Eugenie Davies' answer machine, and Major Ted Wiley three years into a relationship with the dead woman, no matter what the relationship was might be able to identify them. In the kitchen, Wiley stood by the table and looked at the photographs of the two children. He reached for one of them, but he stopped himself when he finally seemed to take in the fact that Lynley and Havers were wearing gloves for a reason. As Havers readied the answer machine to play its messages again, Lynley said, "Are these Mrs. Davies' children, Major Wiley?" "Her son and daughter," Wiley said. "Yes. They're her children. Sonia died a number of years ago. And the boy .. . They were estranged, Eugenie and the boy. Been estranged for I don't know how long. They had some sort of falling out ages back. She never spoke of him to me except to say they no longer saw each other." "And Sonia? Did Mrs. Davies ever speak to you about Sonia?" "Just that she died young. But," Wiley cleared his throat and stepped away from the table as if wishing to distance himself from what he was about to say, "Well, look at her. One can't be surprised that she died young. They .. . they often do." Lynley frowned, wondering that Wiley seemed unaware of a case that certainly must have dominated the newspapers at the time. He said, "Were you in the country twenty years ago, Major Wiley?" No, he'd been .. . Wiley seemed to do a backward progression in his head, cataloguing the years he'd spent on active duty in the Army. He said he'd been in the Falklands, then. But that was long ago and he might have been in Rhodesia at the time ... or what was left of Rhodesia. Why? "Mrs. Davies never told you that Sonia was murdered?" Dumbly, Wiley returned his gaze to the photographs. He said, "She didn't tell me .. . She didn't say.. . No, never once. Good God." He dug into his back pocket and brought out a handkerchief, but he didn't use it. Instead he said only, "This lot don't belong here, on the table, you know. Did you move them?" in apparent reference to the photographs. "This is where we found them," Lynley told him. "They should be scattered round the house. The sitting room. Upstairs. In here. That's how they always were." He pulled out one of the two chairs beneath the table and lowered himself into it heavily. He looked fairly spent at this point, but he nodded at Havers where she stood by the answer machine. Lynley studied the major as he listened to the messages. He tried to read Wiley's reaction when he heard the voices of two other men on the machine. From their words and their tone, it was obvious that they were both involved with Eugenie Davies in some way. But if Wiley reached that conclusion himself and if that conclusion distressed him, he gave no indication other than colour in a face already so rubicund as to make measuring further redness impossible. At the end of the messages, Lynley asked, "Do you recognise anyone?" "Lynn," he said. Eugenie did tell me that. The child of an old friend called Lynn passed away suddenly, and Eugenie went to the funeral. She told me that when she'd heard that the child had died, she knew how Lynn felt and she wanted to commiserate." "Heard that she'd died?" Havers asked. "Heard from who?" Wiley didn't know. He hadn't thought to ask. "I assumed the woman must have rung her up. This Lynn person," he said, 'whoever she is." "Do you know where the funeral was?" He shook his head. "She went off for the day." "When was this?" "Last Tuesday. I asked her if she wanted me to go as well. Funerals being what they are, I thought she might welcome the company. But she said she and Lynn had some talking to do. "I need to see her," she said. That was all." "Need to see her?" Lynley asked. "That's what she said?" "Yes." Need, Lynley thought. Not want, but need. He considered the word and everything it implied. What follows need, he knew, is usually action. But was that the case here in this kitchen in Henley, where it appeared several needs were colliding? There was Eugenie Davies' need to confess sin to Major Wiley. There was an unidentified man's need to talk to Eugenie, declared on her answer machine. And there was Ted Wiley's need ... for what? Lynley asked Havers to play the messages one more time, and he wondered if Wiley's slight change of posture drawing his arms closer to his body was an indication of steeling himself. He kept his gaze fixed on the major as once again the two men on the machine declared their need to speak to Eugenie. I had to ring again, the one voice declared. Eugenie, I need to speak to you. And there it was again: that word need. What would a man do with a desperate need? How wd u do it 2 me if u cd? Tongue Man read the question from Lady Fire without his usual surge of gratification. They'd been dancing round this moment for weeks, despite an initial and inaccurate assessment of her on his part which had suggested he'd have her ready well in advance of Cream Pants It just went to show that you couldn't judge the outcome by someone's ability to engage in suggestive cyberchat, didn't it? Lady Fire had come on strong at first in the descriptive arena, but she'd faded quickly when the talk shifted from fantasy fucks between celebrities (she'd been astonishing in her ability to convey a hot encounter between a purple-haired rock star and their nation's monarch) to fantasy fucks in which she herself was one of the partners. Indeed, Tongue Man had thought for a time that he'd lost her altogether by pushing too soon and revealing too much. He'd even considered moving on to the next possibility Eat Me and he was about to do so when Lady Fire reappeared on the cyberscene. She'd needed some time to think, evidently. But now she knew what she wanted. So How wd u do it 2 me if u cd? Tongue Man studied the question and took note of the fact that his mind didn't kick into high gear at the thought of another supercharged semi-anonymous encounter with another cyberlover so soon after his last. He was doing his best to forget his last anyway, and especially to forget everything that had followed: the flashing lights, the barriers blocking off both ends of his street, the eyes of suspicion coming to rest on him, the Boxster damn them being hauled off for police inspection. But he'd handled it all well enough, he decided. Yes. He'd handled it like a pro. The Met certainly weren't prepared for someone who was wise to their ways, Tongue Man thought. They expected one to lie down, belly up, the moment they started to ask their questions. They reckoned that Joseph Q. Average Citizen eager to prove he had nothing to hide -would jump onto the cooperation wagon and ride it to whatever destination the cops were hoping to take. So when the police said, "We have a few questions, if you wouldn't mind coming down to the station for a chat," most people sauntered right along without a second thought, assuming they had some sort of immunity from a legal system that anyone with a grain of sense knew could ride roughshod over the uninitiated in about five minutes. Tongueman, however, was anything but a member of the uninitiated. He knew what could happen when one cooperated, blithely believing that doing one's civic duty was synonymous with demonstrating one's guilelessness. Bollocks, that. So when the cops said that his address had been in the possession of that woman in the street and could they ask him a few questions please, Tongueman knew which way the wagon ride was heading, and in short order he had his solicitor on the phone. Not that Jake Azoff had liked being torn from his bed at midnight. Not that he didn't whine privately about 'duty solicitors and what they are being paid by the government to do'. But there was no way on earth that Tongue Man was going to place his future not to mention his present -into the hands of a duty solicitor. True, the representation wouldn't have cost him a penny, but a duty solicitor had no vested interest in Tongue Man future whereas Azoff with whom he enjoyed a rather complicated relationship involving shares, bonds, mutual funds, and the like actually did. Besides, what was he paying Azoff for, if not to be ready when legal advice of any sort was needed? But Tongue Man was worried. Obviously. He could lie to himself about it. He could attempt to distract himself by phoning in sick from work and logging onto the Net for a few hours of pornographic fantasising with utter strangers. But his body couldn't prevaricate when it came to unacknowledged anxiety. And the fact that he was enjoying no physical reaction whatsoever to How wd u do it 2 me if u cd? said it all. He typed U wdnt 4get it soon. She typed R u shy 2day? Cm on. Tell how. How? he wondered. Yes, that was it. How? He tried to be loose. Just let the mind roam. He was good at this. He was a master. And she was certainly what all the others had been: older and looking for a sign that she still had what it took. He typed Whr do u want my long? in an attempt to get her to do the work. She typed No fair. R U jst all tlk? He wasn't even talk today, Tongue Man thought, which she'd discover soon enough if they carried on much longer in this vein. It was time to get hurry with Lady Fire A break was called for till he sorted himself out. He typed Ifthts wt u thnk, bby and logged off. Let her stew in that juice for a day or two. He checked how the market was doing before he pushed back from the keyboard. He swung his chair round and left the study, descending to the kitchen where the glass carafe on the coffee maker offered him a final cup. He poured and savoured the flavour of coffee the way he liked it: strong, black, and bitter. Rather like life itself, he decided. He gave a brief laugh devoid of amusement. There was a real irony to the last twelve hours, and he was sure if he thought about it long enough, he'd discover what that irony was. But thinking about it was the last thing he wanted to do at the moment. With a Hampstead murder squad breathing down his neck, he knew he had to maintain his composure. That was the secret of life, composure: in the face of adversity, in the face of triumph, in the face of Something flicked against the kitchen window. Roused, Tongue Man looked out to see two roughly dressed, unshaven men standing in the middle of his back garden. They'd come in from the park that ran the length of nearly all the Crediton Hill back gardens on the east side of the street. Since he had no fence between his property and the park, his visitors hadn't encountered much of an obstacle in gaining access. He was going to have to do something about that. The two men saw him and nudged each other simultaneously. One of them called out, "Open up, Jay. Long time, no see," and the other added, "We're giving you a break, coming in the back way' with a maddening smirk. Tongue Man cursed. First a body in the street, then the Boxster towed away, then himself under the eyes of the cops. And now this. Always guard against thinking a day couldn't possibly get worse, he told himself as he went to the dining room and opened the french windows. "Robbie, Brent," he said to the men in greeting, every bit as if he'd seen them only last week. It was cold outside, and they were hunched against it, stamping their feet and blowing steam like two bulls waiting for the matador. "What're you doing here?" "Ask us in?" Robbie said. "Not a very pleasant day for the garden, this." Tongue Man sighed. It seemed as if every time he took a step forward, something came along to drag him two steps back. He said, "What's this about, then?" But what he meant was, How did you find me this time? Brent grinned, saying, "The usual, Jay," but at least he had the decency to look uncomfortable and to shift his feet. Robbie, on the other hand, was the one to watch out for. Always had been and always would be. He'd throw Granny under a bus if he thought he stood to gain by it, and Tongue Man knew the last thing he could hope for was consideration, respect, or sympathy from the bloke. "Street's blocked off." Robbie cocked his head in the general direction of the bottom of the road. "Something happen?" "A woman was hit by a car last night." "Ah." But the way Robbie said the word declared that he wasn't learning anything new. "And that's why you're not at work today?" "I work from home sometimes. I've told you that." "Might've, yeah. But it's been a while, han't it?" He didn't go on to mention what hung unspoken between them: the time it had been since he'd last come calling and what he'd gone through to track down this address. Instead, he said, "But your office tol' me you had to cancel a meeting today and you phoned in with flu. Or was it a cold? You remember, Brent?" "You talked to my Tongue Man stopped himself. This, after all, was the reaction Robbie sought. He said, "I thought we'd got that straight. I asked you not to speak to anyone but me when you phone me at work. You've got the private line. There's never any need to talk to my secretary." "You ask for a lot," Robbie said. "N't that so, Brent?" This last was obviously meant to remind the other man possessing the lesser intelligence which side he was supposed to be on. Brent said, "Right. You asking us in, or what, Jay? Cold out here." Robbie added, as if superfluously, "There's three tabloid blokes down the end of the street. You know that, Jay? Wha's going on?" Tongue Man cursed in silence and stepped back from the door. The two men outside laughed, knocked hands in a clumsy high five, crossed the flagstones, and came up the steps. "There's a boot scraper. Use it," Tongue Man told them. Last night's rain had made a swamp of the ground beneath the trees that formed the boundary between the houses and the park. Robbie and Brent had tramped right through it like farmers raising pigs. "I've a decent carpet in here." "Take the daisies off, Brent," Robbie said cooperatively. "How's that, Jay? We leave our mucky boots on the step. We know how to be proper guests, me and Brent." "Proper guests wait for invitations." "Wouldn't want to stand on that sort of ceremony now, would we?" Both men were inside, and they seemed to fill the room. They were enormous, and while they'd never used their size to intimidate him, he knew they wouldn't hesitate to use anything within their power to bend his will to theirs. "Why's those tabloid blokes hanging about?" Robbie asked. "Par's I know, the only way tabloids get their stuffs if someone rings them up with something hot." "Yeah," Brent said, bending to peer into the china cabinet, which he used as a mirror to inspect his hair. "Something hot, Jay." He jiggled the cabinet door. "That's antique. Be careful, all right?" "It looked dodgy, those blokes hanging round the barriers at the bottom of the road," Robbie said. "So we had a word with them, me and Brent did, didn't we?" "Yeah. A word." Brent opened the door and took out one of the china cups inside. "Nice, this. Old, is it, Jay?" "Come on, Brent." "He asked a question, Jay." "Fine. It's old. It's early nineteenth century. If you're going to break it, just get it over with and spare me the suspense, all right?" Robbie chuckled. Brent grinned and replaced the cup. He shut the cabinet with the care a neurosurgeon might give to repositioning a section of skull. Robbie said, "One of the tabloid blokes said the cops're interested in someone on this street. Said a snout at the station toP him the dead bird was carrying an address with her last night. Wouldn't give us the address, though, me and Brent, if he knew it. Thought we might be competition." Small chance of that, Tongue Man thought. But he anticipated the direction they were about to take, and he did what he could to brace himself for the inevitable course of the conversation. "Tabloids," Robbie said. "Amazing what they c'n dig up 'less someone tries to head them off." "Yeah. Amazing," Brent agreed. And then as if he'd merely been playing the other man's stooge instead of living the role, he said, "Rolling Suds, Jay. It needs some bolstering." "I "bolstered" it not six months ago." "Right. But that was then, in spring. Season's slow now. And there's this matter of... well, you know." Brent glanced at Robbie. Which was when the pieces clicked into place. "You've borrowed against the business, haven't you?" Tongue Man said. "What is it this time? Horses? Dogs? Cards? I'm not about to ' "Hey, you listen." Robbie took a step forward as if to demonstrate the considerable difference in their sizes. "You owe us, mate. Who stood by you? Who gave aggro to every Tom and Willie who even thought 'bout whispering behind your back? Brent got his arm broke because of you, and I ' "I know the story, Rob." "Good. So hear the ending, okay? We need some oscar, we need it today, and if that's a problem, then you best speak up." Tongue Man looked from one man to the other and saw the future unrolling before him like an endless carpet with a repetitive design. He would sell up again, move house again, establish himself, change his job if necessary .. . and they would still find him. And when they found him, they would trot out the same manoeuvre they'd used with so much success for so many years. This was the way it was going to be. They believed he owed them. And they never forgot. "What do you need?" he asked them wearily. Robbie named his price. Brent blinked and grinned. Tongue Man fetched his chequebook and scrawled the amount. Then he saw them out the way they had come: through the dining room door and into the back garden. He watched till they ducked beneath the bare branches of the plane trees at the edge of the park. Then he went to the phone. When he had Jake Azoff on the line, he took a breath that felt like a stab in the heart. "Rob and Brent found me," he informed his solicitor. "Tell the police I'll talk." Gideon 10 SEPTEMBER I don't understand why you won't prescribe something for me. You're a medical doctor, aren't you? Or will the act of writing out a prescription for migraines reveal you as a charlatan? And please don't produce that tedious commentary about psychotropic medication again. We're not talking about antidepressants, Dr. Rose. About anti psychotics tranquillisers, sedatives, or amphetamines. We are talking about a simple pain killer. Because what I have in my head is simple pain. Libby's trying to help. She was here earlier and she found me where I'd been all morning: in my bedroom with the curtains drawn and a bottle of Harvey's Bristol Cream tucked into the crook of my arm like a Paddington bear. She sat on the edge of the bed and loosened my grip on the bottle, saying, "If you're planning on getting blitzed on this, you'll be hurling chunks in an hour." I groaned. Her style of language, so bizarre and so graphic, was the last thing I needed to hear. I said, "My head." She said, "The pits. But booze's going to make it worse. Let's see if I can help." She put her hands on my head. The tips of her fingers, resting lightly on my temples, were cool and they traced small circles, circles that diminished the pounding in my veins. I felt my body relax beneath her touch, and it seemed to me that I could easily fall asleep with her sitting there so quietly. She moved and lay next to me and placed her hand on my cheek. The same gentle touch of the same cool flesh. She said, "You're burning." I murmured, "It's the headache." She turned her hand so my cheek felt the backs of her fingers, then. Cool, they were so wonderfully cool. I said, "Feels good. Thanks, Libby." I took her hand, kissed her fingers, and placed them back against my cheek. She said, "Gideon .. . ?" I said, "Hmm?" "Oh, never mind." And then when I did just that, she sighed and went on. "D'you ever think about.. . us? I mean, like, where we're headed and all?" I made no reply. It seems to me that it always comes down to this with women. That plural pronoun and the quest for validation: thinking about us confirms that there is an us in the first place. She said, "D'you realise how much time we've spent together?" "A great deal of time." "Geez, we've even, like, slept together." Women, I have also noted, have a marvelous ability to state the obvious. "So d'you think we should go on? D'you think we're ready for the next level in all this? I mean, I've got to say I feel totally ready. Really ready for what comes next. What about you?" And as she spoke, she lifted her leg to rest her thigh against mine, crossed my chest with her arm, and tilted her hips just the ghost of a tilt, this was to press her pubis against me. And suddenly I am back with Beth, back at that point in a relationship when something more is supposed to happen between the man and the woman and when nothing does. At least, not for me. With Beth the next level was permanent commitment. We were lovers, after all, and had been lovers for eleven months. She is the liaison between East London Conservatory and the schools from which the conservatory draws its students. A former music instructor, she is also a cellist. She is perfect for the conservatory in that she speaks the language of the instruments, the language of the music and, most importantly, the language of the children themselves. I am not aware of her at first. Not until we must deal with a parent whose child has run away from home, seeking a shelter that the conservatory cannot provide. The child, we learn, has been prevented from practising by the mother's boyfriend who, we also learn, has other activities in mind for her. She has become little more than a servant in their squalid home. But that little more is defined by sexual favours she has been told to perform on both of them. Beth is Nemesis to this pathetic excuse for a human couple. She is pure Fury. She waits for neither police nor Social Services to deal with the situation because she trusts neither police nor Social Services. She deals with it herself: with a private detective and with a meeting between herself and the couple during which she makes it clear what will happen to them both should this child come to any harm. And to make sure that they understand, she defines harm for them in the explicit street terms that they are accustomed to. I am not there for any of this, but I hear of it from more than one of the other instructors. And the ferocity of her devotion to this student touches something deep within me. A longing, perhaps. Or perhaps a chord of recognition. At any rate, I seek her out. We fall into together in the most natural fashion I can imagine. For a year all is well. But then as tends to happen, she talks of having more. It's logical, I know. Pondering the next step is rational for a man and a woman, although perhaps more for a woman who has her basic biology to consider. When the subject of next comes up between us, I know I should want what follows those professions of love we've made for each other. I realise that nothing stays the same forever and to expect that she and I will be forever content to be fellow musicians and ardent lovers is a form of delusion. But, still, when she broaches the idea of marriage and children, I feel myself grow cool. I avoid the topic at first and when it can no longer be shunted to one side with the excuse of rehearsals, practices, recording sessions, and personal appearances, I find that the coolness within me has increased and now has iced over the idea of not only a future with Beth but also a present as well. I can't be with her as I was before. I feel no passion, and I have no desire. I attempt to go through the motions at first but it's just not there for me any longer. Whatever it was: desire, fervour, attachment, devotion. We grind against each other, then, which is probably the way it happens when a man and a woman are trying to preserve a connection that's already been severed. And in that grinding, we wear each other away until what we had is so distant a memory that we can no longer sift through the discord of our present to locate the harmony that defined our past. And it ends. We end. She goes on to find another man whom she marries twenty-seven months and one week later. I remain as I am. So when Libby spoke of next levels, I felt my spirit shudder. And yet I knew it would always come down to this same conversation between me and a woman, as long as I allowed any woman into my life. The shouldn'ts began their bows in my mind. I shouldn't have shown her the basement flat. I shouldn't have agreed to let it to her. I shouldn't have taken her out for coffee. I shouldn't have bought her a meal, played that first concerto on her stereo, flown kites from Primrose Hill with her, eaten at her table, fallen asleep with her spooned into my body and her night shirt accidentally hiked up so that I could feel her naked arse warm and soft resting against my flaccid penis. That should have told her the tale: that flaccidity. That unchanging, indifferent, laodicean flaccidity. But it did not. Or if it did, she did not wish to draw the conclusion implied by that lifeless piece of flesh. I said, "It feels good, having you here like this." She said, "It could feel better. We could have more." And she moved her hips three times in that way women have, that unconsciously mimes the rotation against which a normal man wants to thrust. But I, as we know, am not a normal man. I knew that I was supposed to desire at least the act if not the woman herself. But I did not. Nothing stirred in me except, perhaps, the ice. And what came over me was stillness and shadow and that disembodied feeling of being outside myself, above myself, looking down on this pitiful excuse for a man and wondering what the hell it was going to take, for God's sake, to move the bastard. Libby said, her cool hand on my hot cheek again, "What's wrong, Gideon?" And she became quite still on the bed next to me. She didn't move away, however, and the fear that a precipitate movement on my part might give her an idea I did not wish her to have prompted me to remain immobile as well. I said, "I've been to the doctor. I've had all the tests. There's nothing to account for them, Libby. It happens." "I'm not talking about the migraines, Gid." "Then what?" "Why aren't you playing? You always play. You're like a clock. Three hours every morning, three hours every afternoon. I've seen Rafe's car in the square every day, so I know he's been here, but I haven't heard either of you guys playing." Rafe. She has that American tendency to give everyone a nickname. Raphael became Rafe the first time she met him. Nothing could suit him less, if you ask me, but he doesn't appear to mind the sobriquet. And he has been here every day, as she pointed out. Sometimes for an hour, sometimes for two or three. He mostly paces while I sit in the window seat and write. He sweats, he mops his forehead and his neck with a handkerchief, he casts apprehensive looks in my direction, and he no doubt projects us into a future in which my anxiety state prematurely terminates an otherwise brilliant career and in which his reputation as my musical Rasputin is summarily ruined. He pictures himself as a footnote in history, one written in typescript so infinitesimal as to require a magnifying glass to be read. I have been his hope for immortality-by-proxy. There he has been for fifty-whatever years, a man incapable of rising even to the level of first violin despite his talent and his every best effort, condemned by a reservoir of stage fright that has unloosed its floodgates in a deluge of terror whenever he's had a chance to audition. The man's a brilliant musician in a family of equally brilliant musicians. But unlike the rest of them all playing in one orchestra or another, right down to his sister who for twenty-some years has played electric guitar in a hippie band called Plated Starfire Raphael has excelled only at passing his artistry on to others. Public performance has defeated him. And I have been his claim to fame and the means by which he's attracted, like a benevolent Pied Piper, a following of hopeful prodigies and their parents for more than two decades. But that's all set to be sacrificed if I don't get a grip on what's gone wrong in my head. Never mind that Raphael has never once bothered to get a grip on what's wrong in his head it can't be normal for one man to sweat through three shirts and one suit jacket every day of his life, can it? -1 am to devote all my waking hours to getting a grip on what's wrong in mine. Raphael, as I've said, is the person who tracked you down initially, Dr. Rose. Or at least, he tracked your father down once the neurologists decided that there was nothing physically wrong with me. So he has a dual vested interest in my recovery: Not only has he been significant in bringing me into your care, which might well put me into his debt in a very large way should you and I overcome my problem, but also my continued career as a violinist will mean his continued career as my muse. So Raphael would very much like to see me get well. You're thinking this is cynicism, aren't you, Dr. Rose? A new wrinkle in the blanket of my character. But remember that I have experienced Raphael Robson for years, so I know how he thinks and what he intends, probably better than he knows himself. For example, I know that he dislikes my father. And I know that Dad would have sacked him a dozen times throughout the years had Raphael's style of instruction allowing the student to develop his own method rather than imposing a preformed method upon him -not been exactly what I needed to thrive. Why does Raphael dislike your father? you ask me curiously, unsure if this animosity between them is what's at the root of my present difficulty. I don't have an answer to that question, Dr. Rose, at least not an answer that's both lucid and complete. But I expect it has to do with my mother. Raphael Robson and your mother? you clarify, and you look at me so intently that I wonder what nugget I've offered you. So I dig into my mind. I try to see what is there. And I make a logical connection from examining everything I've been able to dredge out thus far because those words placed all in a row just now Raphael Robson and my mother have stirred something within me, Dr. Rose. I can feel an uneasiness creeping outward from my gut. I've chewed and swallowed something rotten, and I feel the consequences roiling round in me. What have I inadvertently unearthed? Raphael Robson has disliked my father for twenty-plus years because of my mother. Yes. I feel something like truth in this. But why? You suggest that I take myself back in time to a moment when they are together, perhaps. Raphael and my mother. But the canvas is there, that damned black canvas and if they are on it, the paint has long ago been obscured. And yet you've placed their names together, Raphael's and your mother's, you point out to me. For their names to be linked, other links must exist, even if only within the subconscious mind. You're thinking of them together, you tell me. Do you see them together as well? See them? Together? The idea is preposterous. Which part? you ask. The seeing part or the together part, Gideon. And I know where you're heading with both those alternatives. Don't think I don't. I'm to choose between Oedipal conflicts and the primal scene. That's where we're going, isn't it, Dr. Rose? Little Gideon can't abide the fact that his music instructor ale beguin pour sa mere. Or, what's worse, little Gideon walked in on sa mere et 1'amoureux de sa mere in flagrante delicto, with 1'amoureux de sa mere being Raphael Robson. Why the coy switch to French? you ask me. What does using English do to the facts? How does using English feel, Gideon? Absurd. Ridiculous. Outrageous. Raphael Robson and my mother as lovers? What a ludicrous notion. How could she cope with his sweat? Even twenty years ago he sweats enough to water the garden. 12 SEPTEMBER The garden. Flowers. God. I've remembered those flowers, Dr. Rose. Raphael Robson coming to the house with an enormous spray of flowers. They're for my mother, and she's there in the house so it's either night time or she hasn't gone into work that day. Is she ill? you ask me. I don't know. But I see the flowers. Dozens of them. All different kinds, so many different kinds that I can't even name them. It's the' largest bouquet I've ever seen and yes, yes, she must be ill because Raphael takes the flowers to the kitchen and arranges them himself in a number of vases that Gran digs out for him. But Gran can't stay to help him with the flowers because Granddad must be watched for some reason. For days and days we've had to keep an eye on Granddad, and I don't know why. An episode? you ask me. Is he having a psychotic episode, Gideon? I don't know. Just that everyone is out of sorts. Mother is ill. Granddad is being confined upstairs with music playing all the time to calm him. Sarah-Jane Beckett keeps huddling in corners with James the Lodger and if I get too close to them, she tightens her mouth and tells me to get back to my prep when I haven't actually been given any prep in the first place. I've caught Gran weeping on the stairs. I've heard Dad shouting somewhere: behind a closed door, I think. Sister Cecilia has called in, and I've seen her talking to Raphael in the upstairs corridor. And then there are all those flowers. Raphael and flowers. Scores of flowers that I can't even name. He takes them to the kitchen and I'm required to wait in the sitting room where he has provided an exercise for me to master. And I remember that exercise even today. It is scales. Scales, which I loathe and which I feel are far beneath me. So I refuse to do them. I kick over my music stand. I shout that I'm bored, bored, bored with this stupid music and I won't play it a minute more. I demand the telly. I demand biscuits and milk. I demand. And Sarah-Jane is there in a flash. She says and I do remember exactly what she says, Dr. Rose, because it is so foreign to my ears, "You're not the centre of the world any longer. Behave yourself." Not the centre of the world any longer? you muse. So this must be after Sonia was born. It must be, Dr. Rose. Can you make any connections, then? What sort of connections? Raphael Robson, the flowers, your grandmother weeping, Sarah-Jane Beckett and the lodger gossiping I didn't say that they are gossiping. They're just talking together, their heads together, sharing a secret perhaps? I wonder. Are they lovers? Yes, yes, Dr. Rose. I see how I return to the theme of lovers. No need to point it out to me. And I know where you're heading, in an inexorable process that takes us towards my mother and Raphael. I see where that process is going to end if we examine the clues with rational calm. The clues are these: Raphael with those flowers, Gran crying and Dad shouting, Sister Cecilia in attendance, Sarah-Jane and the lodger tittering in a corner .. . I see where this takes us, Dr. Rose. What stops you from saying it, then? you ask, with those sombre sad sincere eyes on mine. Nothing stops me, except uncertainty. If you say it, you'll be able to test how it feels, to see if it fits. All right, then. All right. Raphael Robson has impregnated my mother and together they have produced this child, Sonia. My father realises he's been cuckolded God, where did that word come from? I feel like I'm taking part in a Jacobean melodrama and the shouting that ensues behind closed doors is his reaction. Granddad hears this, puts together the pieces and is sent round the bend and on his way to another episode. Gran reacts to the chaos between Mother and Dad as well as to the potential of another episode. Sarah-Jane and the lodger are all agog with the excitement. Sister Cecilia is brought in to attempt to mediate the dispute, but Dad can't bear to live in the same house with a constant reminder of Mother's infidelity, and he demands that the baby be sent away somewhere, adopted or something. Mother can't bear the thought of this and she weeps in her room. And Raphael? you ask. He's the proud father, isn't he? Bearing flowers like every proud father before him. How does that feel? you want to know. It makes me want to have a shower. And not because of the thought of my mother 'in the rank sweat of an un seamed bed' if you'll pardon the obvious allusion but because of him. Because of Raphael. Yes, I do see that he may have loved my mother and hated my father for possessing what he himself wanted. But that my mother would have returned his love .. . would have thought of taking that sweaty and perpetually sun-incinerated body into her bed or wherever else they might have accomplished the act.. . this thought is too incredible to be embraced. But children, you point out to me, always find the contemplation of their parents' sexuality abhorrent, Gideon. This is why the actual sight of intercourse I did not witness intercourse, Dr. Rose. Not between my mother and Raphael, not between Sarah-Jane Beckett and the lodger, not between my grandparents, not between my father and anyone. Anyone. Your father and anyone? you are quickly upon it. Who is anyone? Where does anyone come from? Oh God. I don't know. I don't know. 15 SEPTEMBER I went to see him this afternoon, Dr. Rose. Ever since unearthing Sonia and then having the recollection of Raphael and those obscene flowers and the chaos in the house in Kensington Square, I've felt that I needed to talk to my father. So I went down to South Kensington and found him in the garden next to Braemar Mansions, which is where he's lived for the past few years. He was in the little greenhouse that he's commandeered from the rest of the residents of the building, and he was doing what he usually does with his free time. He was hovering over his infant hybrid camellias, examining their leaves with a magnifying glass, looking for either entomological intruders or incipient buds. I could not tell which. It's his dream to create a bloom worthy of the Chelsea Flower Show. Worthy of a prize at the show, I should say. Anything less would be a waste of his time. From the street, I saw him inside the greenhouse, but as I don't have a key to the garden gate, I entered through the building. Dad has the first floor flat at the top of the stairs, and because I could see that the door was ajar up there, I headed up with the thought of securing it. But I found Jill inside at Dad's dining table, working on her lap top with her feet propped up on a hassock she'd brought in from the sitting room. We exchanged pleasantries what exactly does one say to one's father's young, pregnant mistress? and she told me what I already knew, specifically that Dad was in the garden. She said, "He's nurturing the rest of his children," with one of those long-suffering rolls of the eyes that are intended to convey fond exasperation. But that phrase the last of his children seemed heavily laden with meaning today, and I couldn't put it from my mind as I left her. I realised that I'd failed to notice something before that was obvious to me as I made my way back through the flat. Walls, chest tops, table tops, and bookshelves announced a single bald fact that had never once touched upon my consciousness, and that fact was what I first dealt with when I entered the greenhouse, because it seemed to me that if I could wrest a truthful answer from my father, I would be one step closer to understanding. Wrest? You seize upon that word, don't you, Dr. Rose? You seize upon it and everything it implies. Is your father less than truthful, then? you ask me. I'd never thought him so. But now I wonder. And what will you understand? you want to know. Wresting the truth from your father will take you one step closer to understanding what? To understanding what has happened to me. It's connected to your father? I don't want to think so. When I walked into the greenhouse, he didn't look up, and I thought about how his body has begun to suit him for this current employment, bending over small plants. His scoliosis seems to have worsened over the past few years, and although he's just sixty-two years old, he seems older to me because of his growing curvature. Looking at him, I wondered how Jill Foster nearly thirty years his junior had come to see him as a sexual object. What draws human beings together is a puzzle to me. I said, "Why are there no pictures of Sonia in your flat, Dad?" An unexpected frontal assault seemed most likely to garner results. "You've got me from every angle at every age, with violin and without; but you haven't got Sonia. Why?" He did look up then, but I think he was buying time because he took a handkerchief from the back pocket of his jeans and he used it to polish the magnifying glass. He refolded the handkerchief, stowed the lens in a chamois sack, and took the sack to a shelf at the end of the greenhouse where he keeps his gardening tools. "Good afternoon to you as well," he said. "You had more of a greeting for Jill, I hope. Is she still on the computer?" "In the kitchen." "Ah. The screenplay proceeds apace. She's doing The Beautiful and Damned. Have I mentioned that? Ambitious to offer another Fitzgerald to the BBC, but she's determined to prove that an American novel about Americans in America can be made palatable for the British viewing public. We shall see. And how is your own American these days?" That's what he's taken to calling Libby. She has no name other than 'your American' although sometimes she becomes 'your little American' or 'your charming American'. She's particularly my charming American when she commits a social solecism of some kind, as she does with what seems like religious fervour. Libby does not stand on ceremony, and Dad has not forgiven her for referring to him by his Christian name when I first introduced them. Nor has he forgotten her immediate reaction to Jill's pregnancy: "Holy shit. You knocked up a thirty-year-old? Great going, Richard." Jill's older than thirty, of course, but that was a small matter next to the effrontery of Libby's mentioning the great gap in their ages. "She's fine," I said. "Still riding her motorcycle round London, then?" "She's still working for the courier service, if that's what you mean." "And how is she liking her Tartini these days? Shaken or stirred?" He removed his glasses, crossed his arms, and studied me in that way he always does, the way that says, "Steady on or I'll sort you out." That look has managed to derail me on more than one occasion and in combination with his comments about Libby, it probably should have derailed me then. But having a sister pop into my mind where there had been no sister before was enough to bolster me to face whatever attempt at obfuscation he might make. I said, "I'd forgotten Sonia. Not just how she died, but that she'd ever existed in the first place. I'd completely forgotten I ever had a sister. It's like someone took a rubber to my mind and erased her, Dad." "Is that why you've come, then? To ask about photographs?" "To ask about her. Why don't you have any photographs of her?" "You're looking for something sinister in the omission." "You have photos of me. You have an entire exhibit of Granddad. You have Jill. You even have Raphael." "Posing with Szeryng. Raphael was secondary." "Yes. All right. But that begs the question. Why is there nothing of Sonia?" He observed me for a good five seconds before he moved. And then he merely turned and began cleaning off the potting bench where he'd earlier been working. He picked up a brush and used it to sweep loose leaves and the remains of soil into a bucket, which he took from the floor. This done, he sealed the soil bag, capped a bottle of fertiliser, and returned his gardening tools to their respective cubby holes. He cleaned each tool as he put it away. Finally, he removed the heavy green apron he wore when working with his camellias, and he led the way out of the greenhouse and into the garden. There's a bench at one side, and he made his way over to it. It sits beneath a chestnut tree, long the bane of my father's existence. "Too much God damn shade," he always grumbles. "What the hell is supposed to grow in shadow?" Today he seemed to welcome the shade, though. He sat and winced a little, as if he had a pain in his back, which he might well have had because of his spine. But I didn't want to ask about that. He'd avoided my question for long enough. I said, "Dad, why is there ' He said, "This comes of that doctor, doesn't it? That woman .. . what's her name?" "You know it. Dr. Rose." He muttered, "Shite," and pushed himself off the bench. I thought he was going to return to the house in a temper rather than talk about a subject that he clearly didn't want to address, but he eased himself to his knees and began pulling at weeds in the flower bed that lay before us. He said, "If I had my way, residents who don't take proper care of their plots would have their plots confiscated. Just look at this muck." It was hardly that. True, too much water had produced mould and moss on the border stones, and weeds tangled with an enormous fuchsia that appeared to need trimming. But there was something appealing about the natural look of the plot, with its central birdbath overgrown with ivy and its stepping stones sunk deeply into greenery. "I rather like it," I said. Dad gave a derisive snort. He continued pulling weeds, tossing them over his shoulder and onto the gravel path. "Have you touched the Guarnerius yet?" he asked. He objectifies the violin that way, always has done. I prefer to call it by its maker's name, but Dad has melded the maker into the instrument, as ifGuarneri himself had no other life. "No. I haven't." He leaned back on his heels. "That's brilliant, then. That's bloody brilliant. That's the great plan come to nothing, isn't it? Tell me, what's this gaining us? What exact advantage are you being blessed with as you and the good doctor take your shovels to the past? It's the present where our problem is, Gideon. I wouldn't think you'd need reminding of that." "She's calling it psycho genic amnesia. She says that ' "Bollocks. You had a case of nerves. You still have a case of nerves. It happens. Ask anyone. Good God. How many years did Rubenstein not play? Ten? Twelve? And d'you think he spent that time scribbling in a notebook? I expect not." "He didn't lose the playing," I explained to my father. "He feared the playing." "You don't know that you've lost it, do you? If you haven't picked up the Guarnerius yet, you don't know what you've lost and what you're just afraid that you've lost. Anyone with an ounce of common sense would tell you that what you're experiencing is cowardice: plain and simple. And the fact that this doctor hasn't brought herself round to mentioning the word.. He went back to his weeding. "Bollocks." "You wanted me to see her," I reminded him. "When Raphael suggested it, you seconded the idea." "I thought you'd be learning to cope with your fear. I thought that's what she'd be giving you. And if, by the way, I'd known it was going to be a flaming she in that doctor's chair, I would have thought twice about caning you round there to weep on her shoulder in the first place." "I'm not ' "This is what comes of that girl, that bloody blasted God damn girl." And on the last word, he tugged a particularly entangled weed from the plot and uprooted one of the dormant lilies in the process. He swore and began to pound the earth round the plant in an attempt to undo the damage. "This is how Americans think, Gideon, and I hope you see that," he informed me. "This is what comes of coddling an entire generation of layabouts who've had everything handed to them on a platter. They know nothing but leisure so they use that leisure to blame their anomie on their parents. She's encouraged this faultfinding in you, boy. Next, she'll be promoting chat shows as a venue for airing what ails you." "That's not fair on Libby. She's nothing to do with this." "You were bloody all right till she came along." "Nothing's happened between us to cause this problem." "Sleeping with her, are you?" "Dad ' "Shagging her properly?" He looked over his shoulder as he asked this last question, and he must have seen what I preferred to keep hidden. Seeing it, he said ironically, "Ah. Yes. But she is not the root of your problem. I see. So tell me, exactly what does Dr. Rose consider the appropriate moment for you to pick up the violin again?" "We haven't talked about that." He shoved himself to his feet. "That's bloody rich. You've seen her .. . what? .. . three times a week for how many weeks? Three? Four? But you haven't yet got round to talking about the problem? See anything singular in that state of affairs?" "The violin the playing ' "You mean the not playing." "All right. Yes. Not playing the violin. It's a symptom, Dad. It's not the disease." "Tell that to Paris, Munich, and Rome." "I'll make the concerts." "Not the way you're going at it now." "I thought you wanted me to see her. You asked Raphael ' "I asked Raphael for help. Help to get you back on your feet. Help to put the violin in your hands. Help to get you back in the concert hall. Tell me just tell me, swear to it, reassure me, anything that that's what you're getting from this doctor. Because I'm on your side in this, son. I am on your side." "I can't swear to it," I said and I know that my voice reflected all the defeat I felt. "I don't know what I'm getting from her, Dad." He wiped his hands on the sides of his jeans. I heard him curse in a low tone that seemed tinctured with anguish. He said, "Come with me." I followed him. We went back into the building, up the stairs, and into his flat. Jill had made tea and she raised her cup to us, saying, "Want one, Gideon? Darling?" as we passed the kitchen. I thanked her and demurred, but Dad made no response. Jill's face clouded in that way I've seen when Dad ignores her: not as if she's hurt but as if she's comparing his behaviour with some unmentioned catalogue of appropriate behaviours she's developed in her head. Dad strode on, oblivious of this. He went to what I call the Granddad Room, where he keeps a bizarre but nonetheless revealing collection of memorabilia: everything from silver-encased childhood locks of Granddad's hair to letters from the 'great man's' wartime commanding officer commending him upon his comportment while imprisoned in Burma. It sometimes seems to me that Dad has spent the better part of his life trying to pretend his father was either a normal or a supernormal man, rather than what he actually was, a broken mind who spent more than forty years balancing on the brink of insanity for reasons no one would ever mention. He shut the door behind us, and at first I thought he'd taken me into the room in order to recite some sort of panegyric to Granddad. I felt myself getting irritated at what I saw as yet another attempt on his part to deflect a proper conversation. He's done this before? you want to know, don't you? It's the logical question. And I would have to say Yes, he's done this before. I hadn't much considered that fact until recently. I hadn't actually had to consider it because my music was central to our relationship and that's always what we talked about. Practice sessions with Raphael, work at the East London Conservatory, recording sessions, personal appearances, concerts, tours .. . There was always my music to occupy us. And because I was so engaged with my music, any question I asked or subject I wanted to pursue could easily be avoided by directing my thoughts to the violin. How's the Stravinski coming along? What about the Bach? Is The Archduke still giving you trouble? God. The Archduke. It always gave me trouble. It's my Nemesis, that piece. It's my Waterloo. It is, in fact, what I was scheduled to play at Wigmore Hall. First time in public to master the bastard and I couldn't do it. Ah. You see how easily I become distracted by the thought of my music, Dr. Rose. Even then I did it to myself, so you can imagine how skilfully Dad could manage to divert our conversations. But this afternoon, I couldn't be distracted, and Dad must have realised this because he didn't attempt either to regale me with a story of Granddad's feats of ostensible bravery during his imprisonment or to move me with a review of his gallant battle against a monstrous mental condition that had its tendrils buried deep in his brain. Instead, he shut the door behind us, and I realised he'd done so to gain us some privacy. He said, "You're looking for something nasty, aren't you? Isn't that what psychiatrists are always after?" "I'm trying to remember," I told him. "That's what this is about." "How is remembering Sonia supposed to gain you ground with your instrument? Has your Dr. Rose explained that to you?" You haven't, have you, Dr. Rose? All you've said is that we'll begin with what I can remember. I'll write about everything I have in my memory, but you don't explain how doing this exercise will manage to dislodge whatever it is that's blocking my ability to play. And what has Sonia to do with my playing? She must have been a baby when she died. Because surely I would remember an older sibling, one who walked and talked, who played in the sitting room, who created mud puddles in the back garden with me. I would remember that. I said, "Dr. Rose calls this psycho genic amnesia." "Psycho .. . what?" I explained it to him as you explained it to me. I ended with, "Because there's no physical cause for the memory loss and you know the neurologists have cleared the screen on that the cause has to come from somewhere else. From the psyche, Dad, and not from the brain." "That's a load of rubbish," he said but I could tell that the words were a form of bravado. He sat in an armchair and stared at nothing. "All right." I sat as well, in front of the old roll top desk that belonged to Gran. I did what I'd never considered doing before because I'd never felt it necessary. I called his bluff. "All right, Dad. Accepted. It's rubbish. What should I do then? Because if all I'm feeling is nerves and fear, I'd be able to play my music alone, wouldn't I? With no one there? With even Libby out of the house so that I could be certain I had no eavesdroppers anywhere? I could play then, couldn't I? And if I couldn't manage so much as a simple arpeggio, who'd be the wiser? Isn't that the case?" He looked at me. "Have you tried, Gideon?" "Don't you see? I haven't had to try. I don't need to try when I already know." He moved his head, then, away from me. He seemed to go inward and while he did so, I was aware of the silence in the flat and the silence outside, no breeze even blowing to sussurate the tree leaves. When he finally spoke, it was to say, "No one knows the pain of having a child before the child is born. It seems as if it'll be so simple, but it never is." I made no reply. Was he speaking of me? Of Sonia? Or the other, that longer ago child of a distant marriage, the one called Virginia, who had never been spoken of? He went on. "You give them life and you know you'd do anything to protect them, Gideon. That's how it is." I nodded, but he still wasn't looking at me so I said, "Yes." Affirmation of what, I couldn't tell you. But I had to say something, and that was what I said. It seemed enough. Dad said, "Sometimes you fail. You don't intend to. You don't even contemplate failure. But it happens. It comes out of nowhere and it takes you by surprise and before you have a chance to stop even to react in some useless way it's on you. Failure." He met my eyes, then, and the look he gave me was so filled with suffering that I wanted to retreat and to spare him whatever was causing him such pain. Hadn't it been bad enough that his childhood, adolescence, and adulthood had been filled with the sorrow of having a father whose infirmities tried his patience and depleted his reserves of devotion? Was he now supposed to be saddled with a son who appeared to be heading in the same direction? I wanted to retreat. I wanted to spare him. But I wanted my music more. So I said nothing. I let the silence lie like a gauntlet between us. And when my father could bear the unseen sight of that gauntlet no longer, he picked it up. He stood and came towards me and for a moment I thought he intended to touch me. But instead he rolled back the top of my grandmother's desk. From his key ring, he inserted a small key in the central interior drawer. From the drawer, he took a neat stack of papers, and carried them back to his chair. We'd arrived somewhere, and I was aware of the drama and significance of the moment, as if we'd crossed a boundary that neither of us had recognised as even existing before. I felt a churning in my gut as he fingered through the papers. I saw the sparkling crescent in the field of my vision that always heralds the pounding in my head. He said, "I have no pictures of Sonia for the simplest of reasons. Had you thought it through and had you been less distressed you probably would have I'm certain you would have worked it out for yourself. Your mother took the pictures when she left us, Gideon. She took every one of them. Except for this." He took a single snapshot from a soiled envelope. He passed it to me. And for a moment, I found that I didn't want to take it from him, so fraught with meaning had Sonia suddenly become. He read my hesitation. He said, "Take it, Gideon. It's all I have left of her." So I took it, hardly daring to wonder what I might see, but somehow fearing what I would see all the same. I swallowed and steeled myself. I looked. What was in the picture was this: a baby cradled in the arms of a woman I did not recognise. They were seated in the back garden of the Kensington Square house, on a striped deck chair in the sun. The woman's shadow fell across Sonia's face, but her own was fully exposed to the light. She was young and blonde, very blonde. She was aquiline featured. She was very pretty. "I don't.. . Who is this?" I asked my father. "That's Katja," he said. "That's Katja Wolff." Gideon 20 SEPTEMBER This is what I've been wondering ever since Dad showed me that, photograph: If Mother took with her every photograph of Sonia that was in the house, why did she leave that one photo behind? Was it because Sonia's face was so much in shadow that she might have been any baby and consequently not memorable to my mother, not something she could cling to in her grief.. . if grief was indeed what took her from us? Or was it because Katja Wolff was in it? Or was it because Mother didn't know about the photo in the first place? Because, you see, the one thing I cannot tell from the photo which I have now with me and which I will show you when next we meet is who took it. And why did Dad have this particular photo, this photo in which the focal figure is not his daughter, his very own daughter who died, but a young and smiling and golden woman who is not his wife was never his wife never became his wife and was certainly not the mother of that child. I asked Dad about Katja Wolff because asking was the natural thing to do. He told me that she was Sonia's nanny. She was a German girl, he said, with very limited English. She'd made a dramatic and foolhardy escape from East to West Berlin in a hot air balloon that she and her boyfriend had manufactured in secret, and she'd gained some notoriety from that. Do you already know this story, Dr. Rose? Perhaps not. You would have been less than ten years old at that time, I expect, and living.. . where? In America at that point? Living here in England so much closer to where it all happened, I don't remember it myself. But it was, as Dad told me, quite a story then because Katja and her boyfriend didn't attempt their crossing from somewhere in the countryside where it would have been at least marginally safer to go from east into west but instead they sailed from East Berlin itself. The boy didn't make it all the way. The border guards got him. But Katja did make it. She earned her fifteen minutes that way and became a standard bearer for freedom. Television news, front page headlines, magazine stories, radio interviews. She ended up being invited to England. I listened carefully as Dad told me all this, and I watched him closely. I looked for signs and for inner meanings, and I tried to make inferences, leaps, and deductions. Because even now in the situation in which I find myself- sitting here in the music room in Chalcot Square with the Guarneri fifteen feet away, taken from its case at least and surely that's progress God tell me that's progress, Dr. Rose, although I can't bring myself to lift the violin to the height of my shoulder there are questions I'm afraid to ask my father. What sort of questions? you want to know. Questions like these, questions that rise to my mind without effort: Who took that picture of Sonia and Katja? Why did my mother leave only that single photo behind? Did she even know about it? Did she actually take the other pictures or did he destroy them? And why, above all, did my father never speak of them before now: never speak to me of Sonia, of Katja, of my mother? Obviously, he hadn't forgotten they existed. After all, once I brought Sonia up, he produced her picture and from its condition I'd swear before God that it was something he's held and contemplated hundreds of times. So why the silence? People sometimes avoid, you tell me. They dodge subjects too painful for them to face. So what is too painful for my father to face? Sonia herself? Her death? My mother? Her leaving? The pictures? Katja Wolff perhaps? But why would Katja Wolff be a painful subject to Dad? Except for the most obvious reason. Which is? You want me to say it, don't you, Dr. Rose? You want me to write it. You want me to stare at it sitting on this page, and thus to weigh its truth or its falsehood. But where the hell is that going to get me? She's holding my sister, she's cradling her just beneath her breast, her eyes look kind and her face is serene. One of her shoulders is bare because she's wearing a dress or a top with straps too loose and it's brightly coloured, bizarrely coloured, that dress or top, so much yellow and orange and green and blue. And that bare shoulder is smooth and round and yes all right it's an invitation and I'd have to be blind not to see it so if a man is taking that picture of Katja and if that man is my father but it could be Raphael it could be James the Lodger it could be Granddad or the gardener or the postman or any man because she is splendid beautiful seductive and even I a cocked up mess of a paltry excuse of a healthy laughable male can see who she is and what she is and how she's offering what she's offering then that man has an alliance with her and I've a fairly good idea what sort it is. So write about her, you instruct me. Write about Katja. Fill a page with her name alone if that's what it takes and see where filling that page takes you, Gideon. Ask your father if there are other pictures he can show you: family pictures, casual pictures, snapshots of holidays, fetes, parties, gatherings, dinners, anything at all. Look at them closely. See who's in them. Read their expressions. Look for Katja? I ask. Look for what's there. 21 SEPTEMBER Dad says I was six when was Sonia was born. I was just short of eight when she died. I phoned and asked him those two questions outright. Aren't you pleased, Dr. Rose? The horns were there and I actually grabbed them. When I asked him how Sonia died, Dad said, "She drowned, son." The answer seemed to cost him much, and his voice seemed to come from a place that was distant. I felt a tightness inside me, having asked him anything at all, but that did not stop me going on. I asked him her age when she died: two years. And the strain in his voice told me that she had been quite old enough not only to have established a permanent place in his heart but also to have made an indelible mark on his spirit. The sound of that strain and the comprehension that accompanied it explained so much to me about my father: his focus on me throughout my childhood, his determination that I should have and see and be and experience the very best, his single-minded protection of me when I began my public career, his wariness of anyone who came too close and might do me harm. Having lost one child no, my God, having lost two because Virginia his oldest had died young as well he was not about to lose another. So I finally understand why he's stayed so close, been so involved, finessed so much of my life and career. Early on I said aloud what I wanted the violin, my music and he did what it took to see to it that his remaining child was given just that, as if by providing me the means to my dream he would somehow assure my longevity. So he had two jobs; he sent Mother out to work as well; he employed Raphael; he arranged that I should be educated at home. Except all this was before Sonia, wasn't it? It couldn't have been the result of Sonia death. Because if, as he said, she was born when I was six years old, Raphael Robson and Sarah-Jane Beckett would already have been in place in the house. And James the Lodger would have been there as well. And into this already established group Katja Wolff would have come as Sonia's nanny. So that's what must have happened, isn't it: An established group was forced to accept an interloper in their midst. An intruder, if you will. A foreigner as well. And not just any, but a German foreigner. Briefly famous, yes. But German all the same: our wartime enemy and Granddad forever a prisoner of that war. So Sarah-Jane Beckett and James the Lodger are whispering about her in that corner in the kitchen, not about my mother, not about Raphael, and not about those flowers. They are whispering about her because Sarah-Jane is like that, was like that from the first, a whisperer. Her whispering grows out of jealousy because Katja is lithe and pretty and seductive and Sarah-Jane Beckett with her short red hair like a pudding bowl sprouting from her scalp and her body not much different to mine sees how the men in the household look at Katja, especially James the Lodger who helps Katja with her English and laughs when she says with a shiver "Mein Gott, my corpse is not yet used to such rain in this country' instead of my body, which is what she means. She's asked if she would like a cup of tea, and she says, "Oh yes. Most voluntarily and with many gratitudes," and they laugh the men laugh but it's laughter that's charmed. My father, Raphael, James the Lodger, even Granddad. And I remember that. Dr. Rose, I remember. 22 SEPTEMBER So where has she been all these years, Katja Wolff? Buried with Sonia? Buried because of Sonia perhaps? Because of Sonia? You pounce upon the word, don't you? Why because, Gideon? Because of her death. If Katja was Sonia's nanny and Sonia died when she was two years old, Katja would have left us then, wouldn't she? I would have had no need for a nanny with Raphael and Sarah-Jane attending to me. So Katja would have left us after two years -perhaps even less and that would be why I'd forgotten her. I was, after all, only eight at the time, and she wasn't my nanny but Sonia's, so I would have had little to do with her. I was consumed with my music and when the violin wasn't devouring my time, my school lessons were. I'd already had my first public performances, and the fallout from them was an offer to study atjuilliard for a year. Imagine that. Juilliard. What age could I have been: seven? eight? "A virtuoso in the making," I was called. But I didn't want making. I wanted made. 23 SEPTEMBER I don't go to Juilliard as things turn out, despite the honour and what it can mean to my development as an international musician. Because of the history of the place, scores of people three times my age would have done anything to have the same opportunity, to experience the endless possibilities that could come from having this extraordinary transcendent invaluable experience .. . But there is no money and even if there were, I am far too young to go that distance by myself, let alone to live there. And since my family cannot move there en masse, the opportunity passes me by. En masse. Yes. I somehow know that en masse is the only way Juilliard will happen to me, money or not. So I say Please please let me go, Dad, I must go, I want to go to New York because even then I know what it means in my present and can mean to my future. Dad says Gideon, you know we can't go. You can't be there alone, and we can't go as a group. Naturally, I demand to know why. Why why why can't I have what I want when until this moment I have always had it. He says and yes, I remember this well Gideon, the world will come to you. I promise you that, I swear it, son. But it's clear that we can't go to New York. For some reason I know this even as I ask again and again and again, even as I bargain, beg, behave as badly as I've ever done, as I kick the music stand, fling myself into my grandmother's treasured demi-lune table and crack two of its legs .. . even then I know there will be no Juilliard no matter what I do. Alone, with my family, with one of my parents, accompanied only by Raphael, or with Sarah-Jane dogging my heels as my shadow or protector, I will not be going to that Mecca of music. Know, you point out to me. Know before you ask, know as you ask, know despite everything you do to change .. . what, Gideon? What are you trying to change? Reality, obviously. And yes, Dr. Rose, I know that's an answer that takes us nowhere. What's the reality that I already understand as a seven or eight-year-old? It appears to be this: We are not a rich family. Oh yes, we live in an area that not only indicates but also requires money, but the family's owned that house for generations and the only reason the family still owns it is due to the lodgers, to Dad's two jobs, to Mother's going to work, and to Granddad's pension. But money is not something we ever discuss. Talk of money is like speaking of bodily functions at the dinner table. Yet I know I won't go to Juilliard and I feel a tightening inside me as I know this. It starts in my arms. It moves to my stomach. It rises upwards into my throat till I shout oh I shout and I remember what I shout, "It's because she can't go!" And that's when I kick and pound and fling. That's when, Dr. Rose. She can't go? She. Of course. It must be Katja. 26 SEPTEMBER 5:00 P.M. Dad was here again. He came for two hours and was replaced by Raphael. They wanted to make it look as if they weren't taking it in shifts at a death watch, so I had at least five minutes alone between the time Dad left and Raphael arrived. But what they don't know is that I saw them from the window. Raphael came walking into Chalcot Square from the direction of Chalcot Road, and Dad intercepted him in the middle of the garden. They stood on either side of one of the benches and they talked. At least, Dad talked. Raphael listened. He nodded and did what he always does: ran his fingers left to right on his scalp to arrange the fretwork that's left of his hair. Dad was passionate. I could tell that much from the way he gestured, one hand up at the level of his chest and closed into a fist like a punch withheld. The rest I didn't need to interpret because I knew what he was passionate about. He'd come in peace. No mention of anything regarding my music. "Had to get away from her for a while," he sighed. "I've come to believe that women the world over in the last months of pregnancy are all the same." "Jill's moved in, then?" I asked him. "Why tempt fate?" Which was his way of saying that they're sticking to their original plan: have the baby first, combine their households second, and marry when the dust settles on the first two events. It's the fashion these days to go at relationships in that way, and Jill is nothing if not fashionable. But I sometimes wonder how Dad feels about an arrangement so foreign to his other marriages. He's a traditionalist at heart, I believe, with nothing so important as his family and with only one way in mind to make a family. Once he learned Jill was pregnant, I can't see him doing anything but dropping hastily to one knee in order to claim her. Indeed, that's what he did with his first wife although he doesn't know that I learned that from Granddad. He met her while he was on leave from the Army his intended career, by the way he got her pregnant, and he married her. That he's not gone the same route with Jill tells me it's Jill's agenda being followed. "She sleeps when she can now," he told me. "It's always like that in the last six weeks or so. They're so blasted uncomfortable and if the baby's decided to be awake from midnight till five a.m .. ." He brushed his hand through the air dismissively. "Then you've got what you've been waiting for for years: a nightly chance to read War and Peace." "Are you staying with her now?" "I'm doing time on the sofa." "Not good for your back, Dad." "Don't remind me." "Have you settled on the name?" "I still want Car a." "She still wants and the import dawned upon me so suddenly that I scarcely said it but I forced myself to go on. "She's holding fast for Catherine?" He and I locked eyes, and she was there between us, as if she were corporeal, immediate, and eternally that captivating girl in the picture. And I said, even though my palms were damp and my gut was beginning to feel the first spark of a fire to come, "But that would remind you of Katja, wouldn't it? If you called the baby Catherine?" His response was to get up and make coffee, and he took his time with the activity. He commented upon my choice of ready ground beans and what they did to destroy freshness. He went from there to an expatiation of what the presence of yet another Starbucks this one on Gloucester Road not far from Braemar Mansions has done to the atmosphere of his neighbourhood. As he did all this, the pain in my gut began to move slowly down where it planned, as always, to wreak havoc with my bowels. I listened to him make the leap from Starbucks to the Americanisation of global culture, and I pressed my arm hard against the lowest part of my intestines, willing the pain to stop and the urgency to ease because if that did not happen, Dad would have won. I let him exhaust the subject of America: international conglomerates dominating business, Hollywood megalomaniacs determining cinematic art forms, astronomical and singularly obscene salaries and share options becoming the measure of a capitalist's success. When he reached the peroration of his speech evidenced by the fact that the great gulps he was taking from his coffee cup were becoming more frequent1 repeated my question, except this time I didn't ask it as a question. "Katja," I said. "Catherine would remind you." He poured what remained of his coffee down the drain. He strode into the music room. As he moved, he said, "God damn it. Show me, Gideon." And then, "Ah. This is what's going for progress, is it?" He'd seen the Guarneri back in its case and although the case was open, he somehow knew that I hadn't yet attempted to play it. He took it from the case and the absence of the reverence with which he'd touched that violin in the past told me just how angry or agitated, irritated, infuriated, frightened, worried, I do not know which he actually was. He held the instrument out to me, fingers round its neck with that brilliant scroll emerging from his fist like hope coiled round an unspoken promise. He said, "Here. Take it. Show me where we are. Show me exactly where weeks of excavating through the dreck of the past has taken you, Gideon. A note will do. A scale. An arpeggio. Or, miraculously because something tells me it would be miraculous at this point, a movement from the concerto of your choice. Any concerto. Too tough? Then what about a little encore piece?" And the fire was in me but it was changed to a single coal. White hot, silver hot, incandescent, and it moved like acid down through my body. And yes, yes, I see what my father has done, Dr. Rose, you don't need to point it out. I see what he's done. But in that moment I could only say, "I can't. Don't make me. I can't," like a nine year old who's been asked to play a piece that he cannot master. Dad used that next, saying, "Perhaps that's beneath you. Too easy for you, Gideon. An insult to your talent. So let's start with The Archduke, shall we?" Let's start with The Archduke. The acid ate through me and what's left when the pain has knotted my viscera and rendered me useless is blame. I am at fault. I placed myself into this position. Beth set the programme for the Wigmore Hall benefit and she said "What about The Archduke, Gideon?" in absolute innocence. And because it was Beth who made the suggestion, Beth who'd already experienced my other more personal brand of failure, I couldn't bring myself to say, "Forget it. That piece is a jinx." Artists believe in jinxes. The word Macbeth spoken inside a theatre has its counterpart in every field of art. So if I'd called The Archduke what I needed to call it my personal jinx Beth would have understood, despite the way she and I ended. And Sherill wouldn't have cared as much as a sprat what we played. He would have said, in that Do-I-actually-give-a-shit American fashion of his that he uses to hide a monstrous talent, "Just point me to the keyboard, boys and girls," and that would have been that. So it was all down to me and I let it happen. I am to blame. Dad found me where I'd taken myself off to when I could not face the challenge he was issuing: in the she'd in the garden where I sketch the designs and make my kites. That's what I was doing then -sketching and he joined me, the Guarneri replaced in its case and the case itself left inside the house. He said, "You are the music, Gideon. That's what I want you for. That's all that I want." I said, "That's what we're trying to get to." He said, "It's bollocks, going at it this way, scratching in notebooks and having a snooze on the trick cyclist's sofa every three days." "I don't He on a sofa." "You know what I mean." He placed his hand across the sketch I was working on, the better to force me to pay attention. He said, "We can hold people at bay only so long for you, Gideon. We're doing it -Joanne is doing a bloody brilliant job, in fact but there's going to come a point when even a publicist like Joanne, loyal as she is, is going to start asking exactly what the term exhaustion means. When that happens, I'm either going to have to tell her the truth or I'm going to have to invent a fiction for her to offer people that might damn well make the situation worse." "Dad," I said, 'it's mad to think the tabloid-reading public gives a toss about ' "I'm not talking about tabloids. Right. A rock star disappears from view and the journalists are digging through his rubbish every morning, looking for something that will tell them why. That's not the case here and that's not what concerns me. What concerns me is the world that we live in with a schedule of concerts set up through the next twenty-five months, Gideon, as you well know, and with phone calls almost daily, mind you from musical directors enquiring about the state of your health. Which is, as you also know, a euphemism for your playing. "Is he recovering from exhaustion?" means "Do we tear up the contract or keep theprogrammeinplace?" "As he said all this, Dad slowly eased my drawing towards him and although his fingers had begun to smear the lines that sketched out the two bottom spreaders, I didn't point this out to him and I didn't stop him. So he went on. "Now, what I'm asking you to do is simple: Walk inside that house, go up to the music room, and pick up that violin. Don't do it for me because this isn't about me and it never was. Do it for yourself." "I can't." "I'll be with you. I'll be next to you, holding you upright or whatever you want. But you've got to do it." We stared at each other, Dr. Rose. I could feel him willing me out of that she'd where I make my kites, out of the garden, and into the house. He said, "You won't know if you've made progress with her, Gideon, unless you pick up the instrument and try." By that, he meant you, Dr. Rose. He meant progress with you. He meant these hours of writing I've been doing. He meant this sifting through the past we've engaged in which, it appeared, he was willing to assist me in .. I'll only gave him a demonstration that at the very least I could pick up the violin and scrape the bow across the strings. So I said nothing, but I left the she'd and went back to the house. In the music room, I walked not to the window seat where I've done most of this notebook writing, but to the violin case instead. The Guarneri lay there, its top and its purfling gleaming, the repository of two hundred and fifty years of music-making shimmering from its F holes, its sides, and its pegs. I can do this. Twenty-five years do not vanish in an instant. Everything I've learned, everything I know, every natural talent I ever possessed may be obscured, may be buried under a landslide I cannot yet identify, but all of it is there. Dad stood next to me at the violin case. He put his hand on my elbow as I reached for the Guarneri. He murmured, "I won't leave you, son. It's all right. I'm here." And just at that moment, the phone began to ring. Dad's fingers tightened on my elbow like a reflex. He said, "Leave it," in reference to the phone. And since that's what I'd been doing for weeks, I had no trouble accommodating him. But it was Jill's voice that spoke into the answer machine. When she said, "Gideon? Is Richard still there? I must speak to Richard. Has he left? Please pick up," Dad and I reacted identically. We both said, "The baby," and he strode to the phone. He said, "I'm still here. Are you all right, darling?" And then he listened. There was no simple yes or no in her reply. As she made it, Dad turned from me, and said, "What sort of phone call?" He listened to another lengthy response and he finally said, "Jill.. . Jill.. . Enough. Why on earth did you answer it?" She responded at length again. At the end of her reply, Dad said, "Wait. Hang on. Don't be silly. You're working yourself into a real state .. . I can hardly be responsible for an unsolicited call when ' His face darkened suddenly as she apparently interrupted him. "God damn it, Jill. Listen to yourself. You're being completely irrational." And the tone in which he spoke those final words was one I'd heard him use before to dismiss a subject he didn't wish to pursue. Glacial, it was. Dismissive, superior, and in control. But Jill was not one to release a topic so lightly. She went on again. He listened again. His back was to me, but I could see him stiffening. It was nearly a minute before he spoke. "I'm coming home," he told her brusquely. "We're not having this discussion over the phone." He rang off then, and it sounded to me as if she was in mid-sentence when he did so. He turned round, and said with a glance at the Guarneri, "You've had a reprieve." "Everything all right at home?" I asked him. "Nothing's right anywhere," was his curt reply. 26 SEPTEMBER 11:30 P.M. The fact that I'd failed to play for him was undoubtedly what Dad shared with Raphael in the square when he left me because when Raphael joined me not three minutes after he and Dad parted, I could see the information incised on his face. His glance went to the Guarneri. "I can't," I said. "He says you won't." Raphael touched the instrument gently. It was a caress that he might have given to a woman had any woman ever found him an object of sexual attraction. But no woman had done, as far as I knew. Indeed, it seemed to me as I watched him that I alone -and my violin had prevented Raphael from leading a completely solitary life. As if to confirm my thoughts, Raphael said, "This can't go on forever, Gideon." If it does?" I asked him. "It won't. It can't." "Do you take his side, then? Did he ask you out there here I nodded at the window 'to demand that I play for you?" Raphael looked out at the square, at the trees whose leaves were beginning to change now, dressing themselves in the colours of autumn. "No," he said. "He didn't ask that I force you to play. Not today. I dare say his mind was on other things." I wasn't sure I believed him, considering the passion I'd witnessed in my father as he'd spoken to Raphael in the square. But I seized on the idea of 'other things' and I used that to turn the conversation. "Why did my mother leave us?" I asked. "Was it because of Katja Wolff?" Raphael said, "This isn't a subject for you and me." "I've remembered Sonia," I told him. He reached for the latch on the window, and I thought he meant to open it, either to let in the cool air or to climb outside onto the narrow balcony. But he did neither. He merely fumbled with the mechanism uselessly, and it came to me, watching him, how that simple gesture said so much about the lack in every interaction he and I had had that did not involve the violin. I said, "I've remembered her, Raphael. I've remembered Sonia. Katja Wolff as well. Why has no one ever spoken of them?" He looked pained, and I thought he meant to avoid answering me. But just as I was ready to challenge his silence, he said, "Because of what happened to Sonia." "What? What happened to Sonia?" His voice contained wonder when he replied. "You really don't remember, do you? I always thought you never spoke of it because the rest of us didn't. But you don't remember." I shook my head, and the shame of that admission swept through me. She was my sister and I could not remember a single thing about her, Dr. Rose. Until you and I began this process, I'd completely forgotten she'd ever existed. Can you begin to imagine how that feels? Raphael went on, using great kindness to excuse the obsessive self-interest that had erased my younger sister from my mind. He said, "But you weren't even eight years old then, were you? And we never spoke of it once the trial was over. We barely spoke of it during the trial, and we agreed not to speak of it afterwards. Even your mother agreed, although she was broken by everything that happened. Yes. I can see how you might have wiped it all from your mind." I said although my mouth was dry, "Dad told me that she drowned, that Sonia drowned. Why was there a trial? Who was tried? For what?" "Your father didn't tell you more?" "He didn't say anything other than Sonia drowned. He seemed so ... He looked like he was paying a price just to tell me how she died. I didn't want to ask him for more. But now .. . a trial? That must mean .. . a trial?" Raphael nodded, and all the possibilities implied by what I've recalled so far swarmed into my mind at once before he went on: Virginia died young, Granddad had episodes, Mother is weeping and weeping in her room, someone has taken a picture in the garden, Sister Cecilia is in the hall, Dad is shouting, and I'm in the sitting room kicking at the legs of the sofa, upending my music stand, hotly and defiantly declaring that I will not play those infantile scales. "Katja Wolff killed your sister, Gideon," Raphael told me. "She drowned her in her bath." 28 SEPTEMBER He wouldn't say more. He simply shut off, shut down or whatever it is that people do when they've reached the limit of what they can force themselves to speak of. When I said, "Drowned? Deliberately? When? Why?" and felt the apprehension that attended those words streak cold fingers down my spine, he said, "I can't say more. Ask your father." My father. He sits on the edge of my bed and he watches me and I am afraid. Of what? you ask me. How old are you, Gideon? I must be young because he seems so big, like a giant when actually he's much the same size as I am now. He puts his hand on my forehead Are you comforted by the touch? No. No, I shrink away. Does he speak? Not at first. He just sits with me. But after a moment he moves to place his hands on my shoulders as if he expects me to rise and wishes to hold me still where I lie so I might listen to him. So that's what I do. I lie there and we gaze at each other and then finally he starts to speak. He says, "You're safe, Gideon. You are safe." What's he talking about? you ask. Have you had a bad dream? Is that why he's there? Or is it something more? Katja Wolff, perhaps? Are you safe from her? Or is this something from further back, Gideon, from the time before Katja lived at your house? There've been people at the house. I remember that. I've been sent to my room in the company of Sarah-Jane Beckett, and she's talking talking talking to herself in a voice that I'm not meant to hear. She's pacing, talking, and pulling at her fingernails as if she wants to tear them off. She's saying, "I knew it. I could see this coming." She's saying, "Bloody little whore," and I know those are bad words, and I'm surprised and frightened because Sarah-Jane Beckett doesn't use bad words. "Thought we wouldn't know," she says. "Thought we wouldn't notice." Notice what? I don't know. Outside my bedroom, there are footsteps and someone is crying, "Here! In here!" I recognise the voice as barely my father's because it is tinged with so much panic. Above his cries, I hear my mother, and she's saying, "Richard! Oh my God, Richard! Richard!" Granddad is raving, Gran is keening, and someone is calling for everyone to 'clear the room, clear the room'. This last is a voice I don't recognise and when Sarah-Jane hears it, she stops pacing and murmuring and she waits with her head bent, standing next to the door. And there are other voices more strangers' voices that I hear. One asks a series of sharp questions beginning with how. And there are more footsteps, constant movement, metal toolboxes hitting the floor, orders being barked by a man, other tense male voices responding, and through it all, someone is crying out, "No! I do not leave her alone!" That must be Katja because she says do instead of did, which might be what someone unfamiliar with English would say in a moment of panic. And when she says this, weeping as she says it, Sarah-Jane Beckett puts her hand on the doorknob and says, Little bitch." I think she means to go into the corridor where all the noise is, but she doesn't do that. Instead, she looks towards the bed where I'm watching her, and she says, "I won't be leaving now, I expect." Leaving, Gideon? Had she been going somewhere? Was it time for her annual holiday? No. I don't think that's what she's talking about. Somehow I think this leaving was to be permanent. Perhaps she's been sacked as your home teacher? That doesn't seem reasonable. If she's been sacked for incompetence, dishonesty, or some sort of malfeasance, what does Sonia's death have to do with keeping her on as my teacher? Which is what happens, Dr. Rose: Sarah-Jane Beckett remains my teacher until I'm sixteen, when she marries and moves to Cheltenham. So she was planning to leave for another reason, but that reason is cancelled with Sonia's death. Does that make Sonia the reason that Sarah-Jane Beckett was leaving? It seems so, doesn't it? But I can't think why. Chapter Six Doll Cottage possessed an attic, which was the last stop DC Barbara Havers and her superior officer made in Eugenie Davies' house. It was a tiny garret tucked into the eaves. They gained access to it through a hatch in the ceiling just outside the bathroom. Once inside, they were reduced to crawling across an expanse of flooring whose dust free condition suggested that someone made regular visits, either to clean or to look through the small room's contents. "So what d'you think?" Barbara asked as Lynley pulled on a cord affixed to a light bulb in the ceiling. A cone of yellow illumination shone down on him, casting shadows from his forehead that hid his eyes. "Wiley says she wanted to talk to him, but all he would really have to do is play a little fast and loose with the time line he's given us, and Bob would definitely be your et cetera." "Is that your colourful way of indicating Major Wiley has a motive?" Lynley asked her. "There are no cobwebs in here, Havers." "Already noted. No dust either." Lynley ran his hand over a wooden sea chest that stood next to several large cardboard boxes. It had a hasp as a fastener, but there was no lock, so he lifted the top and peered inside as Barbara crawled to the first of the boxes. He said, "Three years of patient effort, establishing a relationship that he hoped would be more than what she had on offer. She informs him, reluctantly, that there can never be more between them than there is because ' "Because of some bloke driving a navy or black Audi with whom she has a row in a car park?" "Possibly. In frustration he follows her to London Major Wiley, this is and runs her down. Yes. I suppose it could have happened that way." "But you don't think so?" "I think it's early days yet. What've you got there?" Barbara examined the contents of the box she'd opened. "Clothes." "Hers?" Barbara lifted the first garment out and held it up: a small child's pair of corduroy dungarees, pink, embroidered with yellow flowers. "The daughter's, I expect." She rustled downwards and scooped out an entire pile of clothing: dresses, jumpers, pyjamas, shorts, tee shirts, Babygros, shoes, and socks. All of it was thematically identical: The colours and the decorations indicated it had been used to dress the child who'd been murdered. Barbara packed it back into the box that had held it and turned to the next box as Lynley lifted out the contents of the wooden sea chest. The second box contained what appeared to be the linens and the other objects that had been used on a baby's cot. Peter Rabbit sheets lay folded neatly inside, and what accompanied them were a musical mobile, a well worn Jemima Puddleduck, six other stuffed animals in a condition that suggested they'd been less favoured than Jemima, and the padding that was used round the sides of a cot to prevent a small child from banging her head. The third box held bathing accoutrements: everything from rubber ducks to a miniature dressing gown. Barbara was about to comment on the macabre nature of having kept this particular set of items considering the end that the child had met when Lynley said: "This is interesting, Havers." She looked up to see that he'd put on his glasses and was holding a stack of newspaper articles, the first of which he'd opened to peruse. Next to him on the floor he'd piled the rest of the sea chest's contents, which comprised a collection of magazines and newspapers and five leather albums suitable for photographs or scrapbooks. "What?" she asked him. "She's kept a virtual library on Gideon." "From newspapers? For what?" "For playing his violin." Lynley lowered the magazine article he was looking at and said, "Gideon Davies, Havers." Barbara rested back on her heels, a washing mitt shaped like a cat in her hand. "Should I be swooning at this bit of newsr?" "You don't know .. . ? Never mind," Lynley said. "I forget myself. Classical music isn't your forte. Were he the lead guitarist for Rotting Teeth ' "Do I sense scorn for my musical preference?" ' or some other group, no doubt you'd have leapt upon his name." "Right," Barbara said. "So who is this bloke when he's at home in the shower?" Lynley explained: a virtuoso violinist, a former child prodigy, the possessor of a worldwide reputation who'd made his professional debut before he was ten years old. "It appears that his mother kept everything associated with his career." "In spite of her estrangement from him?" Havers said. "That suggests he was the one who wanted it. Or the dad, perhaps." "Doesn't it, though," Lynley agreed, sifting through the material. "She's got a treasure trove here. Everything from his latest appearance especially, tabloids included." "Well, if he's famous ..." Barbara pulled out a smaller box from among the bathing items. She opened it to discover a collection of prescription medicines, all made out to the same person: Sonia Davies. "No. This was something of a fiasco," Lynley told her. "A piece of music for a trio. At Wigmore Hall, this was. He refused to play. He left the platform at the start of the piece, and he hasn't played in public since." "Got his knickers in a twist about something?" "Perhaps." "Stage fright?" "Also possible." Lynley held up the newspapers: tabloids and broad sheets "She appears to have collected every article that made mention of it, no matter how small." "Well, she was his mum. What's in the albums?" Lynley opened the first of these as Barbara moved to look over his shoulder. More newspaper articles had been preserved inside the leather volumes. These were accompanied by concert programmes, publicity pictures and brochures for an organization called East London Conservatory. "I wonder exactly why they were estranged," Barbara asked, seeing all of this. "That's certainly the question," Lynley replied. They sorted through the rest of the contents of the boxes and the chest and found everything inside was associated with either Gideon or Sonia Davies. It was as if, Barbara thought, Eugenie Davies had herself not existed before her children had. It was as if she had ceased to exist when she'd lost them. Except, of course, she'd actually lost only one of them. "I expect we're going to have to track down Gideon," Barbara noted. "He's on the list," Lynley agreed. They replaced everything and lowered themselves back into the cottage proper. Lynley pulled the hatch's cover into position. He said, "Fetch those letters from the bedroom, Havers. Let's go up to the Sixty Plus Club. We might be able to fill in some gaps there." Outside, they headed up Friday Street, away from the river, passing opposite Wiley's Books where, Barbara noted, Major Ted Wiley made no effort to hide the fact that he was watching them through the front window, standing just behind a display of picture books. He raised a handkerchief to his face as they moved along the pavement. Crying? Pretending to cry? Or just honking his nose? Barbara couldn't help wondering. Three years was a long time to wait for a commitment, only to be foiled at the end. Friday Street was a mixed bag of businesses and residences. It gave way to Duke Street, where Henley Piano Galleries featured a display of violins and violas along with a guitar, a mandolin and a banjo in the window. Lynley said, "Hang on a moment, Barbara," and sauntered over to study them. Barbara took the opportunity to light a fag, and she gazed at the instruments in collegial cooperation, wondering what she and Lynley were supposed to be seeing. She finally said, "What? What? to Lynley when he continued gazing, his fingers pulling meditatively at his chin. He said, "He's like Menuhin. There are all sorts of similarities in their early careers. But one wonders if the family is similar. Menuhin had his parents' complete devotion from the first. If Gideon hadn't ' "Menu-who?" Lynley glanced her way. "Another prodigy, Havers." He folded his arms and shifted his weight, preparatory it seemed to settling in for a lecture on the topic. "It's something to think about: what happens to the parents' lives when they discover they've produced a genius. A set of responsibilities falls upon them entirely different to those faced by the parents of average children. Now take that set of responsibilities and to them add the responsibilities faced by the parents of a different sort of child." "A child like Sonia," Havers said. "Those responsibilities are equally challenging, equally demanding, and equally difficult but in an entirely different way." "But are they equally rewarding to the parents? And if they aren't, how do the parents cope? And what does the daily act of coping do to their marriage?" Lynley nodded, looking to the violins again. Considering his words, Barbara wondered how far into his own future he was gazing as he studied the instruments. She hadn't yet mentioned to him the conversation she'd had with his wife on the previous evening. Now didn't seem like the time to do it. But on the other hand, he'd given her an entree that was tough to ignore. And wouldn't it benefit him to have a friendly ear he could speak his potential concerns into during the months of Helen's pregnancy? He would hardly want to do so with his wife. She said, "Bit worried, sir?" and dragged on her Player with marginal apprehension because, although she'd worked in partnership with Lynley for three years, they rarely ventured into the realm of their personal lives in conversation. "Worried, Havers?" She blew smoke from the side of her mouth, the better to avoid hitting him in the face with it when he turned back to her. She said, "Helen told me last night about .. . you know. I expect there're worries connected with that. Everyone now and again would have them. You know. I mean .. ." She rustled her hair and fastened the top button of her donkey jacket, which she immediately then unfastened when it felt like a noose. Lynley said, "Ah. The baby. Yes." "Scary moments connected with that, I expect." "Moments indeed," he replied evenly. Then he said, "Let's move on," and headed round the corner from the piano gallery, the conversation between them dismissed. Odd answer, Barbara thought. Odd reaction. And she realised how stereotypical she'd expected to find his response to impending fatherhood. The man had a distinguished family tree. He had a title and a family estate that he'd inherited in his early twenties. Wasn't he supposed to produce an heir to all that in fairly short order after marrying? And shouldn't he be delighted at the prospect of a duty fulfilled within a few months of having taken the marital plunge? She frowned then tossed the dog end of her fag into the street where it landed in a puddle at the kerb. The volumes one didn't know about men, she thought. The Sixty Plus Club was a modest building that sat on one side of a car park in Albert Road, and when they entered, Barbara and Lynley were immediately greeted by a large-toothed woman with red hair who was dressed in a diaphanous flowery affair more suitable for a sunny garden party than for the grey November day outside. She displayed her fearsome oral pearls at them and introduced herself as Georgia Ramsbottom, club secretary, 'by unanimous vote for the fifth consecutive year." Could she assist them? With a parent, perhaps, who might be reluctant to inquire about the club's amenities? A mother recently widowed? A father trying to come to terms with the passing of a beloved spouse? "Sometimes our pensioners' one of whom she obviously did not consider herself to be, despite the shiny and taut facial flesh that spoke of her efforts to retard the ageing process 'drag their feet a bit when it comes to making life changes, don't they?" "Not only pensioners," Lynley said pleasantly as he produced his warrant card and introduced himself and Barbara. "Oh. Goodness me. Sorry. I naturally assumed .. ." Georgia Ramsbottom lowered her voice. "Police? I don't know that I can assist you. I'm only elected you see." "Five consecutive years," Barbara noted helpfully. "Cheers." "Is there something .. . ? But then, you'll want to talk to our director, won't you. She's not in yet today1 can't think why except to say Eugenie often has pressing business to attend to elsewhere but I can ring her at home if you wouldn't mind waiting in the games room?" She indicated the door through which she herself had come to greet them. Beyond it at small tables foursomes sat playing cards, twosomes sat playing chess or draughts, and a one some played Patience with very little of it, if his muttered, "Bugger it' was anything to go by. She herself took a step towards a closed office on whose door the word Director was stencilled on a translucent window. She said, "I'll just pop in her office and phone her." Lynley said, "You're speaking about Mrs. Davies, I take it?" "Eugenie Davies. Yes, of course. She's generally here save for the periods she spends at one of her nursing homes. Very good, is our Eugenie. Very generous. A perfect example of.. ." She seemed at a loss to complete her metaphor, so she changed gears with, "But if you're looking for her, then you already know .. . ? I mean about her reputation for good works? Because otherwise .. ." "I'm afraid she's dead," Lynley said. "Dead," Georgia Ramsbottom repeated after a moment during which she stared at them in incomprehension. "Eugenie? Eugenie Davies? Dead?" "Yes. Last night. In London." "London? Was she .. . ? What on earth happened? Oh my God, does Teddy know?" Georgia's eyes flicked to the doorway through which Lynley and Barbara had come. Her face said that she was inclined to dash out to bear the bad tidings to Major Wiley post haste. "He and Eugenie," she said rapidly and in a low voice as if the card players in the nearby room might attend to something other than their games. "They were .. . Well, of course, neither of them ever came out and said directly but that was Eugenie all over, wasn't it? Very discreet. She wasn't one to divulge the intimate details of her life to just anyone. But one could see when they were together that Ted was besotted with her. And I, for one, was thrilled for them both because although Ted and I were an item ourselves when he first came to Henley, I'd concluded that he wasn't quite right for me and when I passed him on to Eugenie, I couldn't have been happier that they just seemed to click. Chemistry. That certain something between them that he and I just never had. You know how it is." She showed her teeth again. "Poor darling Ted. Poor dear man. Such a pleasure, he is. Such a favourite here in the club." "He knows about Mrs. Davies," Lynley said. "We've spoken to him." "Poor man. First his wife. Now this. My God." She sighed. "Goodness. I shall have to let everyone know." Barbara wondered fleetingly exactly how much the woman was going to enjoy the employment. "If we may have access to her office .. ." Lynley indicated the room with a nod. Georgia Ramsbottom said, "Oh, yes. Oh, of course. It shouldn't be locked. It isn't usually. The phone's in there and if Eugenie's not here and it rings, someone must answer. Naturally. Because some of our members have spouses in nursing homes and a ringing phone could easily mean .. ." Her voice trailed off meaningfully. She turned the knob and swung the door open, waving Barbara and Lynley inside. She said, "If you wouldn't mind my asking .. ." Lynley hesitated just inside the door. He turned to the woman as Barbara passed by, going to the single desk in the room and lowering herself into the chair. On the desk top was a daily diary, which she slid towards her as Lynley said, "Yes?" "Was Ted.. . Is he.. ." She seemed to strive for a funereal tone. "Is Ted terribly distraught, Inspector? We're such friends, and one wonders if one should phone immediately? Or perhaps drop by to offer a word of comfort?" Good grief, Barbara thought. The corpse wasn't cold yet. But, obviously, when a man came up for grabs, there was no time to waste. As Lynley made all the right well-bred noises about only a friend having the ability to judge the suitability of a phone call or a visit and as Georgia Ramsbottom took herself off to the nether world to chew this over, Barbara gave her attention to Eugenie Davies' diary, where she saw that the director of the social club kept herself busy with committee meetings that were associated with club events, visits to places called Quiet Pines, River View, and The Willows which seemed to be nursing homes, engagements with Major Wiley that were indicated by Ted written across a time, and a set of appointments designated by what seemed to be the names of pubs and hotels. These last appeared regularly throughout the year. They were inconsistent as to day and week, but they marked each month of the year at least once. Interestingly, the entries occurred not only in the previous months of the year, not only in the current month, but clear through to the end of the diary, which included the first six months of the coming year as well. Barbara pointed these out to Lynley as he ventured through a personal telephone directory that he'd pulled from the top right hand drawer of the desk. "Standing appointment," he said. "As a pub crawler?" Barbara asked. "A hotel critic? I don't think so. Listen: Catherine Wheel, King's Head, Fox and Glove, Claridges.. . Now that's something different. What does that suggest to you? It suggests an assignation to me." "One hotel?" "No, there are others. Here's the Astoria. And Lords of the Manor. Le Meridien as well. In town, out of town. She was seeing someone, Inspector, and I'll bet it wasn't Wiley." "Phone the hotels. See if she booked a room." "Grunt work." "One of the job's chief glories." As she placed the calls, Barbara went through the rest of Eugenie Davies' desk. The other drawers contained office supplies: business cards, envelopes and stationery, Sellotape and staples, rubber bands, scissors, pencils, and pens. Filing folders held contracts with suppliers of food products, furniture, computers, and copying equipment. By the time she'd learned from the first of the hotels that there was no record of a Eugenie Davies staying with them, Barbara had also concluded that there was nothing of a personal nature inside her desk. She turned her attention to the top of the desk as Lynley bent over a computer that was set in sleep mode. She delved into the dead woman's In tray. Lynley sank into her cyberworld. Like the hotels, the In tray, Barbara found, wasn't exactly a fountain of riveting information. It held three applications for membership to the Sixty Plus Club all from recent widows in their seventies as well as what appeared to be drafts of announcements for upcoming activities. Barbara whistled softly when she saw what the club had on offer for its members. With the approaching holiday season, the pensioners were scheduling themselves into an admirable round of events: Everything from a coach trip to Bath for dinner and the pan to to a New Year's Eve Gala was available. There were cocktail parties, dinners, dances, Boxing Day outings, and midnight church services advertised for the over sixties crowd who certainly weren't taking their golden years in anything resembling a supine position. Behind her, Barbara heard the whir and beep of Eugenie Davies' computer coming out of sleep. She got up and went to the single filing cabinet as Lynley took her place at the desk and swung the chair round to face the computer behind it. The filing cabinet had a lock, but it wasn't fastened, so Barbara pulled open the first drawer and began leafing through the files. These appeared to be largely devoted to correspondence with other pensioners' organisations in the UK. However, there were also documents that dealt with the National Health, with a travel and study programme called Elder Hostel, with geriatric issues from Alzheimer's to osteoporosis, and with legal issues surrounding wills, trusts, and investments. A manila folder was devoted to correspondence from the children of adult members of the Sixty Plus Club. Most of these were letters of gratitude and appreciation for what the club was doing to bring Mum or Dad out of his or her shell. A few questioned the devotion Mum or Dad had apparently developed for an organisation unrelated to the immediate family. Barbara pulled this last group out and set them on the desk. No telling if a pensioner's relative had got a bit worried over Mum's or Dad's affection for the director of the club, not to mention where that affection might have led. She checked to make sure none of the letters were signed Wiley. None were, but that didn't mean that the major had no married daughter who'd written to Eugenie. One of the files was particularly interesting as it was filled with photographs of the club during a variety of events. As Barbara flipped through these, she noted that Major Wiley was a frequent subject of the pictures and that he was generally in the company of a woman who hung on his arm, draped herself over his shoulder, or sat on his lap. Georgia Ramsbottom. Dear Teddy. Ah yes, Barbara thought. She said, "Inspector," at the same moment as Lynley said, "Here's something, Havers." Photographs in hand, she went to the computer. She saw that he had accessed the internet and that he'd brought Eugenie Davies' e-mail onto the screen. "She didn't have a password?" Barbara asked as she handed him the prints. "She had," Lynley said. "But it was easy enough to suss out, all things considered." "One of the kids' names?" Barbara asked. "Sonia," he said, and then a moment later, "Damn." "What?" "There's nothing here." "No convenient message threatening her life? No arrangement for a trip to Hampstead? What about an invitation to Le Meridien?" "Nothing at all." Lynley peered at the screen. "How do you trace someone's e-mail, Havers? Might she have old messages hidden somewhere?" "You're asking me? I've only just got used to mobile phones." "We need to find them. If they're here." "We'll need to take it, then," Barbara said. "The computer, sir. There's going to be someone in London who'll be able to sort it out." "There is indeed," Lynley replied. He sifted through the pictures she'd handed to him, but he didn't appear to give them much attention. "Georgia Ramsbottom," Barbara prompted him. "She and dear Teddy appear to have been quite an item at one time." "Sixty-year-old women running each other down in the road?" Lynley queried. "It's a thought," Barbara said. "I wonder if her car's bashed up." "Somehow I doubt it," Lynley replied. "But we should have a look. I don't think we can ' "Yes, yes. We'll have a look. It's bound to be in the car park." But he sounded dismissive, and Barbara didn't much like it when he set the photographs down summarily and returned to the computer, his mind made up. He logged off Eugenie Davies' e-mail, shut down the machine and began to unplug it. "Let's trace where Mrs. Davies has been on the internet," he said. "No one goes online without leaving a trail of breadcrumbs." Cream Pants DCI Eric Leach kept his face impassive. He'd been a cop for twenty-six years, and he'd long ago realised that in his line of work only a numbskull optimistically concluded he'd heard everything there was to hear from fellow members of the human race. But this one was clearly something for the record books. "You did say Cream Pants Mr. Pitchley?" They were in an interview room at the police station: J. W. Pitchley, his solicitor a diminutive man called Jacob Azoff with nostril hairs like feather dusters and a large coffee stain decorating his tie a police constable called Stanwood, and Leach himself, who was doing the questioning as he tossed back Lemsip like cider and wondered sourly how long it was going to take his immune system to catch up with the single life he was back to leading. One night pub crawling and he became a breeding ground for every virus known to man. Pitchley's solicitor had rung not two hours prior to this meeting. His client wanted to make a statement to the police, Azoff had informed Leach briefly. And he wanted to be assured that this statement would be confidential, just between us boys, treated with kid gloves, and blessed with holy water. In other words, Pitchley didn't want the press to get hold of his name, and if there was a ghost of a chance that the press were going to be given his name .. . et cetera, et cetera, et cetera. Yawn. "He's been down that road before," Azoff had said in a tone that was portentous. "So if we can reach a preliminary agreement about the confidentiality of this conversation, Detective Chief Inspector Leach, I believe we have on our hands a man who deeply wishes TO assist you with your enquiries." So Pitchley and his brief had shown up, had been ushered through the back door of the station like covert operatives, had been given the refreshment they requested fresh orange juice and sparkling mineral water with ice and lime not lemon, thank you and had ensconced themselves at the interview table where Leach had pressed the tape recorder's play button, reciting the day, the time, and the names of all individuals present. Pitchley's story had so far not altered from what he'd told them on the previous night although he'd become more detailed as to arrangements and places and relatively more specific as to names. Unfortunately, aside from the sobriquets adopted by his partners in amorous encounters at the Comfort Inn, he was unable to come up with the actual name of anyone who could confirm his story. Thus, Leach asked reasonably, "Mr. Pitchley, how is it that you expect us to track down this woman? If she wasn't willing to give her name to the bloke who was poking her ' "We don't use that term," Pitchley said with some offence. ' then how do you expect her to be forthcoming when the coppers want to track her down? Doesn't the withholding of her name suggest something to you?" "We always ' "Doesn't it suggest she might not wish to be tracked down in ways other than through the internet?" "It's merely part of the game that we ' "And if she doesn't wish to be tracked down doesn't that suggest she's got someone hanging round like a husband who might not look kindly on a bloke who's had a naked romp with his wife showing up on the front steps with flowers and chocolates and the hope that she'll confirm his alibi?" Pitchley's colour was growing high. But then, so was Leach's level of disbelief. With much hemming and hawing, the man had confessed to being an online Casanova who regularly seduced women of advancing years, none of whom gave him their names or ever knew his. Pitchley claimed that he couldn't remember the number of women he'd had assignations with since the birth of e-mail and chat rooms, and he certainly couldn't remember all their cybernames, but he could swear on a stack of eighty-five religious books of DCI Leach's choice that he observed the same procedure with all of them once an agreement to meet had been reached: drinks and dinner in the Valley of Kings in South Kensington followed by several hours of athletically creative sexual intercourse at the Comfort Inn on Cromwell Road. "So you'll be remembered at either the restaurant or the hotel?" Leach asked the man. That might be, Pitchley was sad to admit, a bit of a problem. The waiters at the Valley of Kings were foreigners, weren't they? The night receptionist at the Comfort Inn was a foreigner as well. And foreigners often had a spot of difficulty remembering an English face, didn't they? Because foreigners "Two-thirds of bloody London are foreigners," Leach cut in. "If you can't come up with something more solid than what you've come up with so far, Mr. Pitchley, we're wasting our time." "Might I remind you, DCI Leach, that Mr. Pitchley's visit to the station is voluntary," Jake Azoff pointed out at this juncture. His had been the orange juice, and Leach noticed that a particle of pulp clung to his moustache like a punk-dyed bird dropping. "Perhaps a more marked degree of civility would serve to encourage a deeper recollection on his part." "I assume that Mr. Pitchley came to the station because he had something more to tell me than he told me last night," Leach retorted. "So far, we're getting a variation on a theme here, and all it's doing is producing more quicksand in which your boy is already up to his chest." "I don't see how that conclusion is at all accurate," Azoff said, affronted. "Don't you, now? Let me enlighten you. Unless I've been dreaming, Mr. Pitchley has just informed us that his hobby is to use the internet to root out women over fifty to chat up and coax into bed. He's just informed us that he's enjoyed a rather marked degree of success in this arena. So much so that he can't even recall how many women have been on the receiving end of his erotic talents. Am I correct, Mr. Pitchley?" Pitchley shifted position and took a sip of water. His skin was still flushed, and his hair dust coloured with a central parting that created wings which flopped into his face swept downwards when he nodded. He kept his head lowered. From embarrassment or regret, as a means of obfuscation .. . Who the hell could tell? "Fine. Let's continue. Now, we have an older woman who's run down by a vehicle on Mr. Pitchley's street, a few doors from his own home. This woman just happens to be in possession of Mr. Pitchley's address. What does that suggest to you?" "I wouldn't draw any conclusion myself," Azoff said. "Naturally. But it's my job to draw conclusions. And the conclusion I draw is that this lady was on her way to see Mr. Pitchley." "We've made no admission that Mr. Pitchley was expecting or knew the woman in question." "And if she was on her way to see him, we have from Mr. Pitchley's own lips one hell of an excellent reason why." Leach pressed his point by leaning forward, the better to see beneath Pitchley's protection of hair. "She was just round the age you like them, Pitchley. Sixty-two. Nice shape to her body what was left of it after the car did its work with her, that is. She was divorced. No remarriage. No children at home. I wonder if she'd got herself a computer? Something to use to while away the nights when she was feeling lonely out there in Henley?" "That's just not possible," Pitchley said. "They never know where I live. They never know how to find me after we've .. . once we've .. . well, after we've left Cromwell Road." "You just fuck 'em and flee," Leach said. "That's rich, that is. But what if one of them decided she didn't like that arrangement? What if one of them followed you home? Not last night, of course, but on another night. Followed you, saw where you live, and bided her time when you never contacted her again." "She didn't. She can't have done." "Why not?" "Because I don't ever go straight home. I drive round for at least thirty minutes sometimes an hour once we leave the hotel to make certain .. He paused and managed to look relatively miserable about the admission he was making, "I drive round to make certain she's .. . well, not on my tail." "Very wise," Leach said with irony. "I know how it sounds. I know it makes me look a perfect shit. And if that's what I am, then that's what I am. But what I'm not is a man who'd run down a woman in the street and you damn well know it if you've examined my car and not used the opportunity to joyride it round London. So I'd like the Boxster returned, Inspector Leach." "Would you, now?" "I would. You wanted information, and I've given you information. I've told you where I was last night, I've told you why, and I've told you with whom." "With Cream Pants "All right. I'll go on line again. I'll get her to come forward if that's what you want." "You can and will," Leach agreed. "But by your own admission, I don't see how that's going to help much in the larger picture." "Why? I can't have been in two places at once." "True enough. But even if Miss Cream Pants or perhaps it's Mrs. Cream Pants Leach couldn't hide his smirk and he didn't bother to try 'confirms your story, there's part of it she can't help you with, isn't there? She can't tell us where you drove for an hour or thirty minutes after you finished with her. And if you're about to argue that she may have followed you, then you're on thin ice again. Because if she followed you, there's a very good chance that Eugenie Davies, after a similar romp on the Cromwell Road, once did the same." Abruptly, Pitchley pushed back from the table, and with so much force that his chair shrieked like a siren against the floor. "Who?" His voice was hoarse, as if it were sandpaper trying to speak. "Who did you say?" "Eugenie Davies. The dead woman." Even as he spoke, DCI Leach read the new reality on the other man's face. "You know her. And by that name. You know her, Mr. Pitchley?" "Oh God. Oh hell." Pitchley moaned. Azoff said to his client in a flash, "Need five minutes?" No answer was required of the suspect because a quick tap sounded on the door of the interview room, and a female PC popped her head inside. She said to Leach, "DI Lynley on the phone, sir. Now or later?" "Five minutes," Leach said curtly to Pitchley and Azoff. He picked up his paperwork and left them alone. Life wasn't a continuum of events, although it wore the guise of exactly that. Instead, it was actually a carousel. In infancy, one mounted a galloping pony and started out on a journey during which one assumed that circumstances would change as the expedition continued. But the truth of life was that it was an endless repetition of what one had already experienced .. . round and round and up and down on that pony. And unless one dealt with whatever challenges one was meant to deal with along the route, those challenges appeared again and again in one form or another till the end of one's days. If he hadn't subscribed to that notion before, J.W. Pitchley was a believer now. He stood on the steps of the Hampstead police station with his solicitor and listened to the peroration of Jake Azoff s harangue. This consisted of a soliloquy on the topic of trust-and-veracity between a client and his lawyer. He was ending with, "Do you think I would have bloody well walked in there if I'd bloody well known what you were bloody well hiding, you arse hole You made me look like a fool and what the hell do you think that does for my credibility with the cops?" Pitchley wanted to say that the current situation wasn't about Azoff, but he didn't bother. He didn't say anything, which encouraged the solicitor to demand, "So what would you like me to call you, sir?" The sir was no indication of anything other than contempt, which coloured it appreciably. Ts it to be Pitchley or Pitchford for what remains of our legal relationship?" "Pitchley's perfectly legal," J.W. Pitchley replied. "There's nothing dodgy in how I changed my name, Jake." "In that, perhaps," Azoff retorted. "But I want the whys, the wherefores, and the hows in writing on my desk, by fax, messenger, e-mail or carrier pigeon, before six o'clock. And then we'll look at what happens next in our professional relationship." J.W. Pitchley, AKA James Pitchford, AKA Tongue Man to his cyber-acquaintances, nodded cooperatively even though he knew Jake Azoff was blowing hot air. Azoff s track record of managing his money was so appalling that he wouldn't be able to exist for a month without someone at the helm of his investments, and Pitchley-Pitchford-Tongue Man had been handling them for so many years and with such a degree of expertise in the financial legerdemain department that to give control over to alesser fiscal guru would be to put Azoff within striking distance of the Inland Revenue, which the solicitor was understandably loath to have happen. But he needed to let off steam, did Azoff, and J.W. Pitchley -formerly James Pitchford and currently AKA Tongue Man couldn't really blame him. So he said, "Will do, Jake. Sorry about the surprise," and he watched as Azoff huffed, raised the collar of his overcoat against a chill wind, and set off down the street. For his part, Pitchley, with no access to his car and no invitation from Azoff to drive him back to Crediton Hill, set off disconsolately for the railway station near Hampstead Heath and prepared to submit himself to its insalubrious embrace. At least it wasn't the underground, he told himself. And there hadn't been a smash-up between competing railway lines vying for the Excellence in Ineptitude Award in at least a week. He walked up Downshire Hill and pondered the death of Eugenie Davies in Crediton Hill, Eugenie Davies, who had been carrying his address. When he first knew Eugenie, he'd been James Pitchford, twenty-five years old, three years graduated from university and one year graduated from a bed sit in Hammersmith the approximate size of a fingernail. A year in those lodgings had offered him access to the language school he needed where, for an exorbitant sum that took ages to recoup, he'd purchased individual instruction in his native language, suitable for business dealings, for academic purposes, for social gatherings, and for cowing doormen at fine hotels. From there, he'd snagged his first job in the City from whose perspective a central London address had sounded so absolutdy right. And since he never invited office mates home for drinks, dinner, or anything else, there was no way for them to know that the letters, documents, and thick party invitations sent to a lofty address in Kensington were actually delivered to the fourth floor bedroom he occupied, which was even smaller than the bed sit he'd begun with in Hammersmith. Cramped accommodation had been a small price to pay all those years ago, not only for the address but also for the companionship the address had afforded. In the time since those days in Kensington Square, J. W. Pitchley had schooled himself not to think of that companionship. But James Pitchford, who had revelled in it and had deemed himself an unmitigated success in self-reinvention because of it, had scarcely lived a single moment without experiencing some passing thought about one member of the household or another. Especially Katja. "You can help my talking English, please?" she had asked him. "I am here one year. I learn not as good as I wish. I will be so grateful." All those charming v's in place of w's when she spoke were her own variation of the abhorrent missing aitch he'd worked so hard upon. He agreed to help her because she was so earnest in supplicating him. He agreed to help her because although she couldn't know it and he would die before telling her they were two of a kind. Her escape from East Germany, while far more dramatic and awe-inspiring, mirrored an earlier flight of his own. And although their motivations were different, the core of them was identical. They already spoke the same language, he and Katja. If he could help her better herself through something as simple as grammar and pronunciation, he was glad to do so. They met in her free time, when Sonia was asleep or with her family. They used his room or hers, where they each had a table that was just large enough for the books from which Katja did her grammar exercises and for the tape recorder into which she spoke. She was earnest in her efforts at diction, enunciation, and pronunciation. She was courageous in her willingness to experiment in a language that was as foreign to her as Yorkshire pudding. Indeed, it was for her courage that James Pitchford had first learned to admire Katja Wolff. The sheer audacity that had carried her over the old Berlin Wall was the stuff of a heroism he could only hope to emulate. I will make myself worthy of you, he told her silently as they sat together and worked on the mystery of irregular verbs. And while the table light shone on her soft blonde hair, he visualised himself touching it, running his fingers through it, feeling it caress his naked chest as she lifted herself from their shared embrace. On her chest of drawers across the room, the intercom broke into James Pitchford's reveries just about as often as he allowed himself to dream them. From two floors below, the child would whimper and Katja's head would rise from her nightly lesson. "It's nothing," he'd say because if it was something, their shared time that was so precious to him and already too brief would be over for the evening. For if Sonia Davies' whimper escalated to a cry, the possibilities were endless as to what the trouble might be. "The little one. I must go," Katja said. "Wait a moment." He used the opportunity to cover her hand with his own. "I cannot, James. If she weeps and Mrs. Davies hears and finds me not with her .. . You know how she is. And this is my job." Job? he thought. It was more like indentured servitude. The hours were long, and the duties were endless. Caring for a child so constantly ill required the efforts of more than one young woman with virtually no experience. Even at twenty-five, James Pitchford could see this. Sonia Davies needed a professional nurse. Why she didn't have one was one of the mysteries of Kensington Square. He wasn't in a position to delve into this mystery, however. He needed to keep his head down and his profile obscure. Still, when Katja hurried off to the child in the midst of an English lesson, when he heard her leap out of her bed in the middle of the night and rush down the stairs to come to the aid of the little girl, when he returned from work and found Katja feeding her, bathing her, occupying her with one stimulation or another, he thought, The poor creature has a family, hasn't she? What are they doing to care for her? And it seemed to him that the answer was nothing. Sonia Davies was left in Katja's charge while the rest of the crew hovered round Gideon. Could he blame them? Pitchford wondered. And even if he could, had they any choice? The Davieses had embarked upon Gideon's fashioning long before Sonia's birth, hadn't they? They were already committed to a course of action, as evidenced by the presence of Raphael Robson and Sarah-Jane Beckett in their world. Thinking of Robson and Beckett, Pitchley-Pitchford entered the station and dropped the required coins into a ticket machine. As he wandered out onto the platform, he reflected upon the astounding fact that he hadn't thought of either Robson or Beckett for years. Robson, of course, he might well have forgotten since the violin instructor had not lived among them. But it was strange that he hadn't given a passing consideration to Sarah-Jane Beckett in all this time. She had been, after all, so very much a presence. "I find my position here more than suitable," she told him early in her employ, in that peculiar pre-Victorian manner of speaking she used when she was in full Governess Mode. "Whilst difficult at times, Gideon is a remarkable pupil, and I feel most privileged to have been chosen from nineteen candidates to be his instructor." She'd just joined the household and her room would be up with his among the eaves on the house's top floor. They would have to share a bathroom the size of a pin head. No bath, just a shower in which an average size man could barely turn around. She'd seen this on the day she moved in, looked at it disapprovingly, but finally sighed with martyred acceptance. "I don't do washing in the bathroom," she informed him, 'and I prefer that you refrain from doing so as well. If we have consideration for each other in this small way, I dare say we shall manage quite well together. Where are you from, James? I can't quite place you. Normally, I'm very good at accents. Mrs. Davies, for instance, grew up in Hampshire. Can you tell? I quite like her. Mr. Davies as well. But the grandfather? He does seem a bit... Well. One doesn't like to speak ill, but.. ." She tapped a finger to her temple and lifted her eyes in the direction of the ceiling. Barmy was the word James would have chosen at another time in his life. But instead he said, "Yes. He's queer fish, isn't he? But if you give him a wide berth, you'll find he's harmless enough." So for just over a year, they'd lived in harmony and with the spirit of cooperation. Daily, James left for his job in the City as Richard and Eugenie Davies took themselves to their own places of employment. The elder Davieses remained at home, where Granddad occupied himself in the garden and Gran kept house. Raphael Robson took Gideon through his sessions on the violin. Sarah-Jane Beckett gave the boy lessons in everything from literature to geology. She spent time with him when she wasn't with Gideon. She asked him out to the cinema or for a drink at the Greyhound, 'just as friends'. But often on those just-as-friends evenings, her leg pressed against his in the darkness as the celluloid flickered its images on the screen, or she took his arm as they entered the pub and she slid her hand from his biceps to his elbow to his wrist so that when their fingers touched it was only natural that they clasp and remain clasped once they were seated. "Tell me about your family, James," she said. "Do tell me. I want every detail." So he manufactured tales for her because telling tales had long ago become his stock in trade. He was flattered by the attention that she an educated girl from the Home Counties was willing to show him. He had held his own counsel and kept his head down for so many years that Sarah-Jane Beckett's interest in him stirred an appetite for companionship that he'd kept suppressed for most of his life. She wasn't the companion he was seeking, however. And while he couldn't have said exactly who that companion would be in his evenings with Sarah-Jane, he felt no heaving of the earth when her leg touched his and no pleasurable longing for the pressure of something more than her palm against his own when she took his hand. Then Katja Wolff arrived, and with Katja the situation was different. But then, Katja Wolff had been as different from Sarah-Jane Beckett as was humanly possible to be. Chapter Seven "She might have been meeting with the ex," DCI Leach said in reference to the man Ted Wiley had seen in the car park of the Sixty Plus Club. "Divorce doesn't mean goodbye forever, take it from me. He's called Richard Davies. Track him down." "He could be the third male voice on her answer machine as well," Lynley acknowledged. "What did that voice say again?" Barbara Havers read the message from her notes. "Sounded angry," she added and tapped her biro meditatively against the paper. "You know, I wonder if our Eugenie played men off against each other." "You're thinking of this other bloke .. . Wiley?" Leach said. "Could be something there," Havers noted. "We've got three separate men on her answer machine. We've got her this is according to Wiley -arguing with a bloke in the car park. We've got her wanting to talk to Wiley, having something to tell him, something he apparently feels was important .. ." Havers hesitated and glanced at Lynley. He knew what she was thinking and what she wanted to say: We've also got love letters from a married man and a computer with access to the internet. She was clearly waiting for him to give her the go-ahead to say this, but he held his tongue, so she finished lamely with, "We've got reason to look closely at every bloke who knew her, if you ask me." Leach nodded. "Go after Richard Davies, then. Get what you can." They were in the incident room, where detective constables were reporting in on the activities to which they'd been assigned. Following Lynley's phone call to the DCI on the way back into town, Leach had allocated further manpower to the PNC in order to trace all navy and black Audis with number plates ending in ADY. He'd put a constable on to BT for a list of the incoming and outgoing phone calls from Doll Cottage in Henley, and another constable was getting on to Cellnet to track down the mobile phone whose owner had left a message on Eugenie Davies' answer machine. Of the activities reported as being completed so far that day, only the DC with the responsibility for gathering information from forensic had offered a useful detail: A number of minute paint particles had been found on the dead woman's clothing when it was examined. Further particles had also been found on her body, specifically upon her mangled legs. "They're putting the paint under analysis," Leach said. "Broken down, it might well give us the make of the car that hit her. But that'll take time. You know the routine." "Have you got a colour on the paint?" Lynley asked. "Black." "What colour is the Boxster you're holding?" Leach told his team to get on with their work and he led the way back to his office, saying, "Car's silver. And it's clean. Not that I'd expect some bloke no matter how much he's rolling in it to run down a woman in a motor that cost more than my mum's house. We're still holding it, though. It's proving useful." He paused at a coffee machine and plugged in a few coins. A viscous liquid drizzled pathetically into a plastic cup. Leach said, "You?" and held the cup up in offer. Havers accepted, although she looked as if she regretted the decision once she tasted the brew; Lynley chose the course of wisdom and demurred. Leach purchased another cup for himself and took them into his office, where he used his elbow to shoot the door home. His phone was ringing, and he barked "Leach," into it as he set down his coffee and sank into his desk chair, nodding Lynley and Havers to chairs of their own. "Hello, love," he said to his caller, his face brightening. "Nope .. . Nope .. . She's what?" with a glance at the other detectives, "Esme, I can't actually talk at the moment. But let me say this: No one has said anything at all about getting remarried, okay? .. . Yes. Right. We'll speak later, love." He dropped the receiver back into place, saying, "Kids. Divorce. It's a real nightmare." Lynley and Havers made noises of sympathy. Leach slurped coffee and dismissed the phone call. He said, "Our bloke Pitchley came by for a little chat this morning, solicitor in tow," and he brought them up to date on what the man from Crediton Hill had revealed: that he not only had recognised the name of the hit-and-run victim, that he not only had once known the hit-and-run victim, but that he'd also lived in the very same house with the hit-and-run victim at the time of the murder of said victim's daughter. "He's changed his name from Pitchford to Pitchley for reasons he's not talking about," Leach concluded. "I like to think I would have twigged his identity eventually, but it's been twenty years since I last saw the bloke and a hell of a lot offish have swum under the bridge in the meantime." "Not surprising," Lynley said. "Now that I know who he is, though, I've got to tell you he smells sweet to me for this business, Boxster or not. He's got something the size of a T-Rex marching through his conscience. I can feel it." "Was he a suspect in the child's death?" Lynley asked. Havers, he noted, had flipped over a new page in her notebook and was jotting the information down on a sheet that looked stained with brown sauce. "No one was a suspect at first. Until all the reports came in, it looked like a case of negligence. You know what I mean: A flaming idiot goes to take a phone call while the toddler's in the bath. The kid tries to reach for a rubber ducky. She slips, knocks herself on the head, and the rest is academic. Unfortunate and tragic, but it happens." Leach slurped more coffee and picked up a document from his desk, which he used to gesture with. "But when the reports came in on the child's body, there were bruises and fractures no one could explain, so everyone became a suspect. It all came down to the nanny dead quick. And she was a real piece of work, she was. I might've forgotten Pitchford's face, but as to that German cow.. . There's not a chance in hell I'd ever forget her. Cold as a cod, that woman was. Gave us one interview one interview, mind you, about a toddler that died in her care and she never said another word. Not to CID, not to her solicitor, not to her barrister. Not to anyone. Took her right to silence straight to Holloway. Never she'd a tear either. But then, what else could you expect from a Kraut? Family were mad to engage her in the first place." From the corner of his eye, Lynley saw Havers tap her biro against the paper she was writing on. He glanced her way to see her eyes had narrowed at Leach. She wasn't a woman who put up with bigotry in any of its forms from xenophobia to misogyny and he could tell she was about to make a comment that wouldn't endear her to the detective chief inspector. He interceded, saying, "The German girl's origins worked against her, then." "Her flaming Kraut personality worked against her." ' "We will fight them on the beaches," Havers murmured. Lynley shot her a look. She shot him one back. Leach either didn't hear or chose to ignore Havers, for which Lynley was grateful. The last thing they needed was a division among them, with lines being drawn on the issue of political correctness. The DCI leaned back in his chair and said, "The diary and phone messages are all you came up with?" "So far," Lynley answered. "There was also a card from a woman called Lynn, but that doesn't appear to be germane at the moment. Her child died and Mrs. Davies went to the funeral, apparently." "There was no other correspondence?" Leach asked. "Letters, bills, the like?" Lynley said, "No. There was no other correspondence," and he didn't look Havers' way. "She had a sea chest filled with materials relating to her son, though. Newspapers, magazines, concert programmes. Major Wiley said that Gideon and Mrs. Davies were estranged, but from the look of her collection, I'd guess it wasn't Mrs. Davies who wanted the estrangement." "The son?" Leach asked. "Or the father." "We're back to the argument in the car park, then." "We could be. Yes." Leach swallowed the rest of his drink and crushed the plastic cup. He said, "But it's odd, don't you think, to have found so little information about her in the woman's own home?" "It was a fairly monastic environment, sir." Leach studied Lynley. Lynley studied Leach. Barbara Havers scribbled furiously into her notebook. A moment passed during which no one admitted to anything. Lynley waited for the DCI to give him the information he wanted. Leach didn't do it. He merely said, "Go for Davies then. He shouldn't be tough to track down." So the plans were set and the assignments made, and Lynley and Havers were soon back in the street and heading for their respective cars. Havers lit a cigarette and said, "What're you going to do with those letters, Inspector?" Lynley didn't pretend to need clarification. "I'm giving them back to Webberly," he said, 'eventually." "Giving them .. ." Havers drew in on her cigarette and blew the smoke out in a burst of frustration. "If word gets out that you've taken them from the scene and not turned them in ... That we've taken them from the scene and not turned them in ... Bloody hell, do you know where that puts us, Inspector? And on top of it, there's that computer. Why didn't you tell Leach about that computer?" "I'll tell him, Havers," Lynley said. "Once I know exactly what's on it." "Jesus in a basket!" Havers cried. "That's suppressing ' "Listen, Barbara. There's only one way it would come to light right now that we've got the computer and those letters, and we both know what that one way is." He looked at her evenly and waited for her to connect the dots. Her expression altered. She said, "Hey. I don't grass, Inspector," and he could see the affront she'd taken. He said, "That's why I work with you, Barbara," and he disarmed the Bentley's security system. He opened the door before he spoke to her again, over the car's roof. "If I've been brought in on this case to keep Webberly protected, I'd like to know that and I'd like it said to my face. Wouldn't you?" "I'd like to keep my nose clean is what I'd like," Havers replied. "One of us got demoted two months ago, Inspector, and if memory serves me right, it wasn't you." She was white faced, watching Lynley with an expression that was completely unlike the belligerent officer he'd worked with for the past several years. She'd taken a professional and psychological beating in the last five months, and Lynley realised that he owed her the opportunity to avoid another one. He said, "Havers, would you prefer to be out of this? That's not a problem. One phone call and ' "I don't want to be out." "But it could get dicey. It's already dicey. I more than understand how you might ' "Don't talk rubbish. I'm in, Inspector. I'd just like us to have a little care with what we're doing." "I'm taking care," Lynley assured her. "Those letters from Webberly are not an issue in this case." "You'd better hope that's true," Havers replied. She pushed away from the Bentley. Let's get on with it, then. What's next?" Lynley accepted her words and dwelt for a moment on how best to approach the next phase of their job. "You've the look of a woman in need of spiritual guidance," he said. "Track down the Convent of the Immaculate Conception." "What about you?" "I'll follow our DCI's suggestion. Richard Davies. If he's seen or talked to his former wife recently, he might know what she wanted to confess to Wiley." "He might be what she wanted to confess to Wiley," Havers pointed out. "There's that as well," Lynley said. Jill Foster had never run into a serious snag while she was ticking off accomplishments from the Master List that she'd first compiled as a fifteen year old schoolgirl. Reading all of Shakespeare (done by age twenty), hitch-hiking the length of Ireland (done by twenty-one), taking a double first at Cambridge (by age twenty-two), travelling alone in India (by twenty-three), exploring the Amazon River (twenty-six), kayaking the Nile (twenty-seven), writing a definitive study of Proust (still in progress), adapting the novels of F. Scott Fitzgerald for television (also in the works) .. . From athleticism to intellectualism, Jill Foster hadn't experienced even a hiccup on her progress through life. In the personal realm, however, she'd had more difficulty. She'd placed the achievement of marriage and children before her thirty-fifth birthday, but she'd found it more challenging than she'd anticipated to attain a goal that involved the enthusiastic cooperation of another person. And it was marriage and children that she'd wanted: in that order. Yes, it was trendy to be 'partners' with someone. Every third pop singer, film star, or professional athlete was living proof of that, congratulated in the tabloids on a daily basis for their mindless ability to reproduce, as if the act of reproduction itself took some sort of talent that only they possessed. But Jill was not a woman easily swayed by what bore the appearance of a trend, particularly when it came to her Master List of Accomplishments. One did not achieve one's goals by taking shortcuts that were nothing but passing vogues. The aftermath of her affair with Jonathon had for a time seriously undermined her confidence in her ability to reach her marital and maternal objective. But then Richard had come into her life, and she'd quickly seen that an accomplishment that had so far eluded her was finally within her reach. In the world of her grandparents even of her parents to have become lovers with Richard before a formal commitment had been made between them would have been both foolhardy and ruinous. Indeed, even today there were probably a dozen agony aunts whose advice considering Jill's ultimate objective would have been to wait for the ring, the church bells, and the confetti before embarking on any kind of intimacy with one's intended bridegroom, or at least to have used what were euphemistically called 'precautions' until such a time as the deal was signed, sealed, and registered in the customary way. But Richard's earnest pursuit of her in the aftermath of Jonathon's failure to leave his wife constituted a phase in Jill's life that was both flattering and essential. His desire for her had aroused an equal desire in her, and she was deeply gratified to feel it since, after Jonathon, she'd begun to wonder if she would ever feel that hot aching hunger unlike any other hunger -for a man again. And that hunger, Jill had found, was firmly tied to impregnation. It might have been due to a dawning knowledge of how few years she actually had left for childbirth, but every time she and Richard made love in those first months, her body had strained to take him into her more deeply, as if the sole act of surging towards him would ensure that their contact produced a child. So she'd gone at marriage backwards, but what did it matter? They were happy with each other, and Richard was devotion itself. Still, she had the occasional flicker of doubt, a memento left her by Jonathon's promises and Jonathon's lies. And while, when doubts surfaced, she reminded herself that the two men were absolutely nothing alike, there were times when a shadow cast on Richard's face or a silence in the midst of a discussion between them triggered a set of worries within her that she tried to tell herself were unnecessary and unreal. Even if Richard and I don't marry, she would lecture herself in her worst moments, Catherine and I shall be perfectly all right. I've a career to fall back on, for heaven's sake. And the age of unmarried mothers being social pariahs has long since passed. But that wasn't really the point, was it, her long-range planning self would argue. The point was marriage and husband as well. And the larger point was family, which she chose to define as father-mother-child. So now she said pleasantly to Richard with that ultimate goal in mind, "Darling, if you'd only see it, I know you'd agree." They were in Richard's car on the way to South Kensington from Shepherd's Bush in order to keep an engagement with an estate agent who was going to determine a selling price for Richard's flat. This was progress in the right direction to Jill's way of thinking, since they obviously couldn't live en famille in Braemar Mansions once the baby was born. There was far too little room. She was privately grateful for this additional indication of Richard's positive marital intentions, but she hadn't yet been able to understand why they couldn't take the next step and have a look at a suitable detached house completely renovated that she'd managed to locate in Harrow. Looking at the house didn't mean they were going to have to buy it, for heaven's sake. And since she hadn't yet put her own flat up for sale "Let's not both be homeless at once," Richard had advised when she'd suggested doing so there was little chance that having a simple look at a building on offer would result in their owning it on this very day. "It would give you a sense of what I have in mind for us," she told him. "And if you don't like what I have in mind once you see it, at least we'll know straightaway and I can change course." Not that she would, naturally. She would merely expend more careful and subtle effort to bring him round to her way of thinking. "I don't need to see it to know what you have in mind, darling," Richard replied as they trundled along in moderately bearable traffic, considering the time of day. "Modern conveniences, double glazing, fitted carpet, and large gardens in both front and back." He looked over at her and smiled affectionately. "Tell me I've got it wrong and I'll buy you dinner." "You'll buy me dinner either way," she told him. "If I'm on my feet long enough to cook you a meal, I'll swell up like a ham." "But tell me I've got it wrong about the house." "Oh, you know you haven't got it wrong," she laughed. And she touched him fondly, smoothing her fingers against his temple where his hair was grey. "And don't begin alecture, if you're thinking of one, all right? I didn't go anywhere on my own to find it. The estate agent drove me up to Harrow." "Which is as it should be," Richard said. His hand moved to her stomach, monstrously huge, the skin stretched taut like a kettle drum. "Are you awake, Cara Ann?" he inquired of their child. Catherine Ann, Jill corrected him patiently. But she didn't make the correction aloud. He'd somewhat recovered from the distress in which he'd arrived in Shepherd's Bush earlier that day. There was no point to upsetting him all over again. While an argument concerning the name of their child was hardly going to cause an emotional upheaval, she did believe that what Richard had been through deserved her sympathy. He didn't still love the woman, she assured herself. After all, they'd been divorced for years. It was merely the shock of everything that had made him so ill, having to gaze upon the bloodied corpse of someone who had once shared his life. That was something to make anyone ill, wasn't it? Asked to look upon the broken body of Jonathon Stewart, wouldn't she have reacted likewise? With this in mind, she decided she could compromise on the house in Harrow. She was confident that her willingness to do so would prompt an important compromise on his part. She led into this compromise by saying, "All right, then. We won't go up to Harrow today. But the modern bit, Richard. Are you quite happy with that?" "Decent plumbing and double glazing?" he asked. "Fitted carpet, dishwasher, and all the rest? I dare say I can live with it. As long as you're there. Both of you, that is." He smiled at her, but still she sensed something deeper in his eyes, looking like regret for what might have been. But he doesn't still love Eugenie, she thought insistently. He doesn't and he can't, because even if he does, she's dead. She's dead. "Richard," she said, "I've been thinking about the flats. Mine and yours. And which of them we should sell first, actually." He braked for a light near Netting Hill station, where an unappealing crowd dressed in London black were clogging the pavements and distributing into the street their share of London rubbish. "I thought we'd decided all that," he said. "We had, yes. But I've been thinking .. ." "And?" He looked wary. "Well, it seems to me that my flat would go faster, that's all. It's been done up. It's completely modernised. The building's smart. The neighbourhood's lovely. And it's freehold. I expect it would fetch quite enough for us to put money down on a house and not have to wait to sell both flats before we have a place for all of us." "But we've already made the decision," Richard pointed out. "We've an estate agent coming ' "We can put him off surely. We can say we've changed our minds. Darling, let's face it. Your flat's hopelessly old-fashioned. It's as ancient as Methuselah. And it's got less than fifty years left on the lease. It's in a good enough building if the owners would ever get round to fixing it up but it's going to be months before it sells. Whereas mine .. . You must see how different things could be." The light changed and they continued through the traffic. Richard didn't speak till he made the turn into the antiques shop heaven that was Kensington Church Street. He said, "Months. Yes. Right. It could take months to sell my flat. But is that really a problem? You can't want to move house for at least six months anyway." "But ' "It would be impossible in your condition, Jill. Worse, it would be nothing short of torture, and it might be dangerous." He swung them past the Carmelite Church and onwards down towards Palace Gate and South Kensington, weaving his way through buses and taxis. Another stretch of road, and he made the turn into Cornwall Gardens, going on to say, "Are you nervous, darling? You haven't said much about actually having the baby. And I've been preoccupied first Gideon, now this .. . this other business so I haven't done as right by you as I should have. Listen, I do know that." "Richard, I quite understand how concerned you've been with Gideon unwell. I don't mean you to think ' "I think nothing but that I adore you, you're having our child, and we've a life to establish together. And if you'd like me to be in Shepherd's Bush with you more frequently now that you're nearly due, I'm happy to do that." "You're there every night already. I can hardly ask for more than that, can I?" He reversed into a parking space some thirty yards distant from Braemar Mansions, after which he switched off the engine and turned to her. "You can ask me for anything, Jill. And if it pleases you to offer your flat for sale before mine, then it pleases me. But I won't have any part of your moving house till you've had the baby and recovered from that, and I seriously doubt your mother would disagree with me." Jill herself couldn't disagree. She knew her mother would have a heart attack at the thought of her packing up her belongings and trekking anywhere other than from kitchen to loo in less than three months after giving birth. "Childbirth puts the female body through a trauma, darling," Dora Foster would have said. "Coddle yourself. It may be your only chance to do so." "Well?" Richard said, smiling at her fondly. "What's your reply?" "You are so wretchedly logical and reasonable. How can I argue? What you've said makes such sense." He leaned towards her and kissed her. "You're ever gracious in defeat. And if I'm not mistaken He nodded towards the old Edwardian building as he came round her side of the car and eased her up and onto the pavement 'our estate agent is right on time. Which bodes well, I think." Jill hoped that was the case. A tall blond man was mounting the front steps of Braemar Mansions, and as Jill and Richard approached, he studied the line of bells and pushed what appeared to be Richard's. "You're looking for us, I believe," Richard called out. The man turned, saying, "Mr. Davies?" "Yes." "Thomas Lynley," he said. "New Scotland Yard." Lynley always made it a habit to gauge reactions when he introduced himself to people who weren't expecting him, and he did so now as the man and woman on the pavement paused before mounting the front steps to what was a considerably down-at-heel building at the west end of Cornwall Gardens. The woman looked as if she'd normally be quite small although at the moment she was swollen in every conceivable way from pregnancy. Her ankles in particular were the size of tennis balls, giving undue emphasis to her feet, which were themselves large and out of proportion to her height. She walked with the rolling gait of someone trying to keep her balance. Davies himself walked with a stoop that promised to worsen as he grew older. He had hair that was faded from its original colour ginger or blond, it was difficult to tell and he wore it swept straight back from his forehead with no effort made to disguise its thinness. Both Davies and the woman appeared surprised when Lynley introduced himself, the woman perhaps more so because she looked at Davies and said, "Richard? Scotland Yard?" as if she either needed his protection or wondered why the police were coming to call. Davies said, "Is this about.. . ?" but changed course, perhaps with the realisation that a conversation on the front steps wasn't what he wanted to engage in with a police officer. He said, "Come in. We were expecting an estate agent. You've given us a surprise. This is my fiancee, by the way." He went on to say that she was called Jill Foster. She looked to be somewhere in her thirties plain but with very good skin and hair the colour of currants, cut simply just beneath her ears and Lynley had assumed upon seeing her that she was another of Richard Davies' children or perhaps a niece. He nodded to her, taking note of the tightness with which she clutched Davies' arm. Davies let them into the building, where he led up the stairs to his first floor flat. It had a sitting room that overlooked the street, a dim rectangle broken by a window that was at the moment covered by shutters. Davies went to fold these back, saying to his fiancee, "Sit down, darling. Put your feet up," and to Lynley, "May I offer you something? Tea? Coffee? We're expecting an estate agent as I said and we haven't a great deal of time before he gets here." Lynley assured them that the visit wouldn't take long, and he accepted a cup of tea to buy time to have a look round the sitting room at its clutter of belongings. These took the form of amateur photographs of outdoor scenes, countless pictures of Davies' virtuoso son, and a collection of hand-carved walking sticks that formed a circular decoration over the fireplace in the fashion of weaponry found in Scottish castles. There was also a surfeit of prewar furniture, stacks of newspapers and magazines, and a display of other memorabilia related to his son's career as a violinist. "Richard's a bit of a pack rat," Jill Foster told Lynley as she lowered herself with some care into a chair whose need for re-stuffing and re-upholstering was evidenced by the tufts of what looked like yellowish cotton wool pushing upwards like springtime's new growth. "You should see the other rooms." Lynley picked up a photograph of the violinist in childhood. He was standing attentively, his instrument in his hand, gazing up at Lord Menuhin who was in turn gazing down at him, instrument also in hand, smiling beneficently. "Gideon," Lynley said. "The one, the only," Jill Foster replied. Lynley glanced at her. She smiled, perhaps to take the sting from her words. "Richard's joy and the centre of his life," she said. "It's understandable but sometimes it is a bit wearing." "I expect it is. How long have you known Mr. Davies?" With a grunt and a heave, she said, "Bother. This won't do," and moved from the armchair she'd chosen to lower herself to the sofa, where she raised her legs and put a cushion into position beneath her feet. She said, "God. Two more weeks. I begin to understand why they call it "being delivered"." She rested her back against a second cushion. Both were as threadbare as the furniture. "Three years now." "He's looking forward to new fatherhood?" "When most men his age are looking forward to grand fatherhood Jill replied. "But even at his age, yes. He's looking forward." Lynley smiled. "My own wife's pregnant." Jill's face altered brightly, the connection between them made. "Is she? Is this your first, Inspector?" Lynley nodded. "I can take aleaf out of Mr. Davies' book. He seems devoted." She smiled and rolled her eyes in good humour. "He's like a mother hen. Don't walk down the stairs too quickly, Jill. Don't take public transport. Don't drive in traffic. No. Don't drive at all, my dear. Don't go for a walk without a companion. Don't drink anything that contains caffeine. Carry your mobile everywhere you go. Avoid crowds, cigarette smoke, and preservatives. The list is endless." "He's anxious for you." "It's rather touching when it doesn't make me want to lock him in a cupboard." "Did you have a chance to compare notes with his former wife? About her own pregnancies?" "Eugenie? No. We never met. Previous wives and current wives. Or in my case wives-to-be. Sometimes it's in the interest of wisdom to keep them apart, isn't it." Richard Davies returned to them then, bearing a plastic tray on which sat a single cup and saucer accompanied by a small jug of milk and a bowl of sugar cubes. He said to his fiancee, "Darling, you weren't wanting tea as well, were you?" Jill said that she wasn't, and Richard settled in next to her, raising her painfully swollen feet to his lap after placing Lynley's tea on the side table next to the chair in which Jill had first been sitting. "How can we help you, Inspector?" he asked. Lynley took a notebook from his jacket pocket. He thought it an interesting question. Indeed, he thought all of Davies' behaviour interesting. He couldn't remember the last time he'd turned up on someone's doorstep unexpected, offered his identification, and been given a cup of tea in welcome. The general responses to an unanticipated visit from the police were suspicion, alarm, and anxiety, no matter how hidden the recipient of the visit attempted to keep them. Davies said, as if in expectation of just this reaction on Lynley's part, "I expect you've come about Eugenie. I wasn't much help to your Hamp-stead colleagues when I was asked to look .. . well, to look at her, actually. I hadn't seen Eugenie in years, and the injuries .. ." He raised his hands from his fiancee's feet, a hopeless gesture. Lynley said, "I've come about Mrs. Davies. Yes." At which point Richard Davies looked at his fiancee, saying, "Would you prefer to have a lie down, Jill? I can let you know when the estate agent arrives." "I'm fine," she said. "I share your life, Richard." He squeezed her leg, saying to Lynley, "If you're here, then it must have been Eugenie. It would have been too much to hope for that someone other than Eugenie would have been carrying her identification." "It was Mrs. Davies," Lynley said. "I'm sorry." Davies nodded, but he didn't look mournful. He said, "It's been nearly twenty years since I last saw her. I feel sorry she had such an accident as she had, but my loss of her our divorce was long ago. I've had years to recover from her death, if you see what I mean." Lynley could see. Permanent mourning on Davies' part would have suggested either a devotion to match Victoria's or an unhealthy obsession, which was fairly much the same. However, Davies had a misconception that needed correcting. Lynley said, "I'm afraid it wasn't an accident. Your former wife was murdered, Mr. Davies." Jill Foster raised herself from the cushion supporting her back. "But wasn't she .. . ? Richard, didn't you say ... ?" For his part, Richard Davies looked at Lynley steadily, his pupils growing larger. "I was told a hit and run," he said. Lynley explained. Given information was always scant until they had the first of their reports from forensic. An initial inspection of the dead woman's body not to mention where she'd been found had certainly called for the conclusion that she'd been hit by someone who then fled the scene. But a closer examination had revealed that she'd been hit more than once, her body had been moved, and what tyre tracks they had found on her clothing and her corpse indicated the damage had been done by a single vehicle. So their hit-and-run motorist was a murderer, and the death was no accident but a homicide. "Good God." Jill held out a hand to Richard Davies, but he didn't take it. Instead, he seemed to go into himself, stunned, to a dark place from which she couldn't draw him. Davies said, "But they gave me absolutely no indication .. ." He stared into nothing, murmuring, "God. How can things possibly get worse?" Then he looked at Lynley. "I shall have to tell Gideon. You will allow me to be the one to tell my son? He's been unwell for several months. He's been unable to play. This could push him .. . You will allow me to be the one? It won't be in the papers yet, will it? In the Evening Standard? Not before Gideon's been told?" "That's in the hands of the press office," Lynley said. "But they'll hold back till the family's been notified. And you can help us with that. Aside from Gideon, are there other family members?" "Her brothers, but God only knows where they are. Her parents were still alive twenty years ago, but they may well be dead by now. Frank and Lesley Staines. Frank was an Anglican priest, so you might start there -through the Church to find him." "And the brothers?" "One younger, one older. Douglas and Ian. Again, I can't say if they're living or dead. When I first met Eugenie, she hadn't seen any of her family in years and she never saw them the entire time we were married." "We'll try to find them." Lynley took up his cup in which a Typhoo tea bag drooped soggily against the side. He removed it and added a splash of milk before he said, "And you, Mr. Davies? When exactly did you last see your former wife?" "When we were divorced. Perhaps .. . sixteen years ago? There were papers to sign in the course of the proceedings, and that was when I saw her." "Since then?" "Nothing. I'd spoken to her recently, though." Lynley set his cup down. "When was this?" "She'd been phoning regularly to ask about Gideon. She'd learned he wasn't well. This would have been .. ." He turned to his fiancee. "When was that awful concert, darling?" Jill Foster met his gaze so steadily that the fact that he knew exactly when the concert had been was more than apparent. She said, "The thirtieth of July, wasn't it?" "That sounds right, yes." And to Lynley, "Eugenie phoned shortly afterwards. I can't recall exactly when. Perhaps round the fifteenth of August. She'd kept in touch since then." "The last time you spoke to her?" "Sometime last week? I don't know exactly. I didn't think to make note of it. She phoned here and left a message. I phoned her back. There wasn't much to tell her, so the conversation was brief. Gideon and I'd very much appreciate this bit staying confidential, Inspector is suffering from acute stage fright. We've given out that it's exhaustion, but that's a bit of a euphemism. Eugenie wasn't taken in by it, and I doubt the public's going to accept it much longer." "But she didn't visit your son? Did she contact him?" "If she did, Gideon's said nothing to me about it. Which in itself would be a surprise. My son and I are quite close, Inspector." Davies' fiancee lowered her eyes. Lynley made a mental tick next to the possibility of filial-paternal devotion's being a one way street with only Richard Davies travelling down it. He said, "Your wife was on her way to see a man in Hampstead, evidently. She had his address with her. He's called J.W. Pitchley but you may know him by his previous name, James Pitchford." Davies' hands stopped caressing Jill Foster's feet. He became as still as a life size Rodin. "You remember him?" Lynley asked. "Yes. I remember him. But.. ." Again, to his fiancee, "Darling, are you certain you don't want a lie down?" Her expression said volumes about her intentions: There was no way on earth that Jill Foster was going to toddle off to the bedroom now. Davies said, "I'd be unlikely to forget anyone from that period of time, Inspector. Nor would you had you lived through it. James lodged with us for a number of years before Sonia, our daughter .. ." He left off the rest of the sentence, using that gesture with his fingers lifted briefly to express the rest. "Have you any idea if your former wife kept in touch with this man? He's been interviewed and he himself says no. But in your phone conversations, did your wife ever mention him?" Davies shook his head. "We never entertained any subject at all other than Gideon and Gideon's health." "She made no mention of her family, then, of her life in Henley-on-Thames, of friends she may have made there, of lovers?" "Nothing at all like that, Inspector. Eugenie and I didn't part under the best circumstances. She walked out one day and that was the end of it. No explanation, no argument, no excuse. One day she was there; the next day she was gone, and four years later I heard from her solicitors. So the blood between us wasn't exactly flowing with the milk of human kindness. I'll admit that I wasn't particularly pleased to hear from her when I finally did." "Could she have been involved with another man at the time she left you? This would be someone who may have recently re-entered her life." "This .. . you said Pitches?" "Pitchley," Lynley said. "Yes. Could she have been involved with Pitchley when he was James Pitchford?" Davies considered this. "He was a good deal younger than Eugenie -fifteen years, perhaps? Ten? But Eugenie was an attractive woman, so I suppose it's possible there was something between them. Let me top up your tea, Inspector." Lynley acquiesced in this idea. Davies eased himself from beneath Jill Foster's legs and took himself into the kitchen where running water indicated a minute or two in which he'd be waiting for the kettle to boil. Lynley wondered about the time that this gained the man: why he wanted it, why he needed it. Surprise was piling upon shock, it was true, and Davies was of the generation for whom a display of emotion was tantamount to baring one's backside in Piccadilly Circus. And his fiancee was taking much careful notice of his every reaction, so he had good reason to want some moments to pull himself together. But still .. . Richard Davies returned to them then, this time carrying a glass of orange juice as well, which he pressed upon his fiancee, saying, "You need the vitamins Jill." Lynley took his tea cup with thanks and said, "Your wife was involved with a man in Henley-on-Thames, a man called Wiley. Did she mention him to you in any of your conversations?" "No," Davies said. "Really, Inspector, we confined ourselves to Gideon." "Major Wiley tells us they were estranged, Gideon and his mother." "Does he?" Richard asked. "I wouldn't choose that word myself. Eugenie left one day and never returned. If you want to call it estrangement, I suppose you can. I prefer abandonment." "Her sin?" Lynley asked. "What?" "She told Major Wiley she had something she wished to confess to him. Perhaps abandoning her child and her husband was it. She never was able to confess, by the way. Or so Major Wiley tells us." "You think that Wiley .. . ?" "We're just gathering information at this point, Mr. Davies. Is there anything you can add to what you've already told me? Is there anything your former wife might have said in passing that you didn't think of at the time as having significance, but that now ' "Cresswell-White." Davies said it almost like a meditation, but when he repeated the name, he did so with more conviction. "Yes. There's Cresswell-White. I had a letter from him, so Eugenie must have done as well." "And Cresswell-White is .. . ?" "She would have had a letter from him, certainly, because when killers are released, the families are informed as a matter of course. At least, that's what my letter said." "Killers?" Lynley said. "Have you had word about your daughter's killer?" In answer Richard Davies left the room and walked down a short corridor where he entered another room. The sound of drawers and cupboards opening and shutting ensued. When he returned, he bore ale gal size envelope, which he handed over to Lynley. It contained a letter from one Bertram Cresswell-White, Esq." Queen's Counsel and all the window dressing, and it had been sent from Number Five Paper Buildings, Temple, London. It informed Mr. Richard Davies that HM Prison Holloway would be releasing Miss Katja Wolff on parole on the date given below. Should Miss Katja Wolff harass, threaten, or even contact Mr. Davies in any way, Mr. Davies was to inform Mr. Cresswell-White, Q.C." immediately. Lynley read the message and examined the date: twelve weeks to the day that Eugenie Davies had died. He said to Richard Davies, "Has she made contact with you?" "No," Davies said. "Had she done so, believe me, I swear to God I would have.. ." His bravado receded, the stuff of the younger man he no longer was. He said, "Might she have located Eugenie?" "Mrs. Davies didn't mention her?" "No." "Would she have mentioned her had she seen her?" Davies shook his head, not so much in denial as in confusion. "I don't know. At one time, yes. Of course she would have said something to me. But after all this time ... I just don't know, Inspector." "May I keep this letter?" "Of course. Will you look for her, Inspector?" "I'll have a man track her down." Lynley went through the rest of his questions, from which he learned only the identity of the Cecilia who'd written the note to Eugenie Davies: Sister Cecilia Mahoney, she was called, Eugenie Davies' close friend at the Convent of the Immaculate Conception. The convent itself was in Kensington Square where the Davies family had long ago lived. "Eugenie was a convert to Catholicism," Richard Davies said. "She hated her father he was a raging maniac when he wasn't holier than thou from the pulpit and it seemed the best way to get vengeance on him for a hellish childhood. At least that's what she told me." "Were your children baptised Catholics, then?" Lynley asked. "Only if she and Cecilia did it in secret. My own dad would have had a seizure otherwise." Davies smiled with fondness. "He was quite a tyrannical paterfamilias in his own way." And have you taken a page from that book, Lynley wondered, despite your air of helpfulness now? But that was something he'd have to learn from Gideon. Gideon I OCTOBER Where is this taking us, Dr. Rose? You ask me to consider my dreams now as well as my memories, and I wonder if you know what you're doing. You ask me to write my random thoughts, to free myself from worrying about how they connect or where they might lead or how they might produce the key that will fit into the lock of my mind, and my patience is wearing thin. Dad informs me that your previous work in New York was primarily with eating disorders. He's been doing his prep where you're concerned a few phone calls to the States was all it took because as he sees no progress, he's begun to question how much more time I want to devote to dredging up the past instead of dealing with the present. "For God's sake, she doesn't work with musicians," he said when I spoke to him today. "She doesn't even work with other artists. So you can continue to line her coffers with money and get nothing in return which is all that's been happening so far, Gideon or you can try something else." "What?" I asked him. "If you're so insistent upon psychiatry as the answer, then at least try someone who'll address the problem. And the problem is the violin, Gideon. The problem is not what you do or do not remember about the past." I said, "Raphael told me." "What?" "That Katja Wolff drowned Sonia." There was silence at this and as we were on the phone and not having the conversation in person, I could only guess at Dad's expression. His face would have hardened as the muscles tightened, and his eyes would have gone opaque. In telling me even as little as he did, Raphael had broken an agreement of twenty years' standing. Dad would not like that. "What happened?" I asked. "I won't discuss this." "It's why Mother left us, isn't it?" "I've told you ' "Nothing. You've told me nothing. If you're so intent on helping me, why won't you help me with this?" "Because this has sod all to do with your problem. But digging it all up, dissecting every nuance, and dwelling on them ad infinitum are brilliant ways to sidestep the real issues, Gideon." "I'm going at this the only way I can." "Bollocks. You're dancing to her tune like a nancy boy." "That's bloody unfair." "I'll tell you what's unfair. Unfair is being asked to stand to one side and watch your son throw his life away. Unfair is having lived solely for that son's benefit for a quarter of a century so that he can become the musician he wishes to be, only to have him fall to pieces the first time he has a setback. Unfair is crafting a relationship with that son unlike any I could ever have had with my own father and then watching the love and trust that I've had with him for years get transferred to a thirty-year-old psychiatrist with nothing more to recommend her than having managed to hike up to Machu Picchu without having to be carried there." "Jesus. How much nosing round have you done?" "Enough to know how much time you're wasting. God damn it, Gideon but his voice wasn't hard when he said those words 'have you even tried?" To play, naturally. That was what he wanted to know. It was as if, to him, I'd ceased to be anything other than a music-making machine. When I didn't reply, he said not unreasonably, "Don't you see, then, that this could be nothing more than a momentary blackout? A loose connection in your brain. But because you've never had the smallest blip in your career, you've panicked. Pick up the violin, for God's sake. Do it for yourself before it's too late." "Too late for what?" "To overcome the fear. Don't let it drag you down. Don't dwell on it." By the end, his words didn't seem illogical. Instead, they seemed to indicate an action that was reasonable and sound. Perhaps I was making a mountain out of a dust speck, using a manufactured 'illness of spirit' as a cover for a wound to my professional pride. So I picked up the Guarneri, Dr. Rose. In the cause of optimism, I put the shoulder rest in place. I gave myself the break of sheet music -alleviating the pressure of having to produce a measure from memory by choosing the Mendelssohn that I'd played a thousand times before and I found my body, as Miss Orr would have told me. I could even hear her: "Body up, shoulders down. Upbow with whole arm. Only the tops of the fingers move." I heard it all, but I could do none of it. The bow skittered across the strings, and my fingers flailed the gut with as much delicacy as a butcher dressing a pig. Nerves, I thought. This is all about nerves. So I tried a second time, and the sound was worse. And that's all it was that I produced: sound, Dr. Rose. I didn't come close to approaching music. As for actually playing the Mendelssohn .. . I might have been attempting a moon landing from the music room, so impossible was the task I'd undertaken. How did it feel to make the attempt? you want to know. How did it feel to close the coffin on Tim Freeman? I reply. Husband, companion, cancer victim, and everything else that he was to you, Dr. Rose. How did it feel when he died? Because this is a death to me and if there's going to be a resurrection, what I need to know is how it's going to be effected by sifting through the past and writing down my dreams? Tell me that, please. For God's sake, tell me. 2 OCTOBER I didn't tell Dad. Why? you ask. I couldn't face it. Face what? His disappointment, I suppose. He's fashioned his entire life round mine, and my entire life has been fashioned round my playing. Both of us are hurtling towards oblivion right now, and it seems an act of kindness if only one of us knows it. When I set the Guarneri back into its case, I made my decision. I left the house. On the front steps I met Libby, however. She was leaning next to the wrought iron railing with a bag of marshmallows open on her lap. She didn't appear to be eating them, although she did look as if she were contemplating doing so. I wondered how long she'd been sitting there, and when she spoke, I had my answer. "I heard." She got to her feet, looked down at the bag, then stuffed it into the capacious front of her dungarees. "That's what's been wrong, isn't it, Gid? That's why you haven't been playing. Why didn't you tell me? I mean, I thought we were friends." "We are." "No way." "Way," I said. She didn't smile. "Friends help each other out." "You can't help with this. I don't even know what's wrong with me, Libby." She looked off bleakly into the square. She said, "Shit. What are we doing, Gid? Why're we flying your kites? Why the hell are we sleeping together? I mean, if you can't even talk to me ' The conversation was a reenactment of a hundred discussions with Beth, with a slight change in subject. With her, it had been, "Gideon, if we can't even make love any longer .. ." With Libby things hadn't gone far enough to make that a subject, for which I was grateful. I heard her out but had nothing to say. When she had finished talking and realised there would be no reply, she followed me to my car, saying, "Hey! Wait a minute. I'm talking to you. Wait a minute. Wait." She grabbed my arm. "I've got to go," I told her. "Where?" "Victoria." "Why?" "Libby "Fine." And when I'd unlocked the car, she climbed inside. "Then I'm coming with you," she said. To rid myself of her, I would have had to remove her bodily from the car. And there was a set to her jaw and a steeliness in her eyes that told me she wouldn't be removed without putting up a monumental fight. I didn't have the energy or the heart for that, so I started the car and we drove to Victoria. The Press Association has its offices just round the corner from Victoria Station in Vauxhall Bridge Road, and that's where I took us. On the way, Libby brought out the marshmallows, which she started to consume. I said, "Aren't you on the "no-white-diet"?" "These are coloured pink and green, in case you didn't notice." "You once said a white that's coloured artificially counts as white," I reminded her. "I say lots of things." She slapped the plastic bag against her lap and appeared to reach a decision because she said, "I want to know how long. And you'd better be totally straight with me." "How long what?" "How long not playing. Or playing like that. Just then. Like that. How long?" And then, in a switch that wasn't atypical of her, she said, "Never mind. I ought to have noticed before now. It's because of that bastard Rock." "We can hardly blame your husband ' "Ex. Please." "Not yet." "Close enough." "Fine. But we can't blame him ' "Loathsome as he is." ' if I'm having a rough time just now." "That's so not what I was talking about," she said, irritation in her voice. "There's more people on earth than you, Gideon. I was talking about myself. I would've noticed what's been happening with you if I hadn't been so strung out about Rock." But I hardly heard what she said about her husband because I was struck by her words: more people on earth than you, Gideon and how they echoed almost exactly Sarah-Jane Beckett's sentiments all those years ago. You're not the centre of the universe any longer. And I couldn't see Libby in the car with me because all I could see was Sarah-Jane Beckett. I can see her still, I can see her eyes peering at me, her face bending over me. It's pinched, that face, with eyes that are narrowed to a band of stubby lashes. What's she talking about when she says that? you ask me. Yes. That's the question, all right. I've been naughty while she was responsible for me. It's been left to her to determine my punishment, which has been a thorough wigging, Sarah-Jane style. There's a wooden box in Granddad's wardrobe and I've got into it. It's filled with old boot black, shoe polish, and rags, and I've used all this as paints. All along the first floor corridor I've smeared brown polish and boot black on the walls. Bored, bored, bored, I've thought as I ruined the wallpaper and wiped my hands on the curtains. But I'm not bored, really, and Sarah-Jane knows it. That's not why I've done it. Do you know why you did it? you ask me. I'm not sure now. But I think I'm angry, and I feel afraid. Quite distinctly and very much afraid. I see the spark of interest in your face when I tell you this, Dr. Rose. Now we're getting somewhere. Angry and afraid. Emotion. Passion. Something, by God, that you can work with. But I have little to add to that. Only this: When Libby said more people on earth than you, Gideon, what I felt distinctly was fear. It was a fear quite apart from the fear of never being able to play my instrument again, however. It was a fear that seemed entirely unrelated to the conversation that she and I were having. Yet I felt it in such a sudden paroxysm that I heard myself cry, "Don't!" at Libby, and all the while it wasn't Libby I was talking to at all. And what is it you were afraid of? you inquire. That, I would have thought, is obvious. 3 OCTOBER 3:30 P.M. We were directed up to the news library, a storage room where rack after rack of news cuttings are filed in manila folders and catalogued by subject along scores of rolling shelves. Do you know this place? Readers spend their days there, poring through every major paper, clipping and identifying stories which then become part of the library's collection. Nearby, a single table and a photocopier serve members of the public who want to do research. I told a poorly dressed, long-haired boy what I was looking for. He said, "You should've rung first. It'll take twenty minutes or so. That stuff's not kept up here." I said that we'd wait, but I found that my nerves were tangled so excessively that I couldn't remain in the library once the young man had gone off on his search. I couldn't breathe, and I shortly found myself sweating as much as Raphael. I said to Libby that I needed some air. She followed me out onto Vauxhall Bridge Road. But I couldn't breathe there either. "It's the traffic," I said to Libby, 'the fumes," and I found myself gasping like a winded runner. And then my viscera went into action: stomach clenching and bowels loosening, threatening a humiliating explosion right there on the pavement. Libby said, "You look like hell, Gid." I said, "No. No. I'm all right." She said, "You're all right like I'm the Virgin Mary. C'mere. Get out of the middle of the sidewalk." She led me round the corner to a coffee bar and sat me at a table. She said, "Don't move unless you're, like, going to faint, okay? In which case, put your head.. . somewhere. Where is it you're supposed to put your head? Between your knees?" Then she went to the counter, and came back with some orange juice. "When was the last time you ate?" she asked. And I sinner and soft-spined poltroon let her believe her own explanation. I said, "Can't remember exactly," and I downed the orange juice as if it were an elixir that could return to me everything that I have so far lost. Lost? you say, ever vigilant for triggers. Yes. What I've lost: my music, Beth, my mother, a childhood, memories that other people take for granted. Sonia? you ask. Sonia as well? Would you have her back if you could, Gideon? "Yes, of course, is my reply. But a different Sonia. And that answer stops me. Because contained within it is a reservoir of remorse for what I'd forgotten about my sister. 3 OCTOBER 6:00 P.M. When I was able to breathe normally, Libby and I returned to the news library. There, five bulging manila envelopes folders awaited us, crammed with newspaper cuttings from over twenty years ago. They were roughly clipped from papers and dog-eared; they were musty smelling and discoloured with age. While Libby searched out a second chair so that she could join me at the table, I reached for the first envelope and opened it. KILLER NANNY CONVICTED leaped out at me, with the unspoken reassurance that newspaper headlines have changed little in the last two decades. The words were accompanied by a picture, and there she was before me, my sister's killer. The photograph looked as if it had been taken very early on in the legal process since Katja Wolffhad been caught by the lens not at the Old Bailey or in prison somewhere but in the Earl's Court Road as she came out of the Kensington police station in the company of a stubby man in an ill-fitting suit. Just behind him, partially obscured by the doorway, was a figure I would not have been able to make out had I not known the shape of him and the size of him and the general look of him from nearly twenty-five years of daily sessions on the violin: Raphael Robson. I registered the presence of these two men assuming the former to be Katja Wolffs solicitor but what I focused on was Katja herself. Much had changed for her since the day of the sunny picture that had been taken in the back garden. Of course, that photograph had been posed while this one had obviously been snapped in that frantic rush that exists between the time a newsworthy figure leaves a building and the time she enters a vehicle which whisks her away. What was evident in the picture was that public notoriety at least of this sort hadn't suited Katja Wolff. She looked thin and ill. And whereas the back garden shot had depicted her smiling up at the camera openly and happily, this shot had captured her trying to hide her face. The photographer must have got in quite close, because the picture wasn't grainy as one would expect from a telephoto shot. Indeed, every detail of Katja Wolffs face seemed harshly highlighted by the camera's proximity. Her mouth was pressed shut so her lips were thin. Dark skin formed half moon bruises beneath her eyes. Her aquiline features had sharpened unappealingly from loss in weight. Her arms were sticklike and where her blouse formed a V, her collar bone looked like the edge of a plank. Beyond Raphael's presence behind her and the badly suited man with Katja's skeletal elbow in his hand that's what I noticed about my sister's killer. I read the copy to find that Mr. Justice Stjohn Wilkes had passed the mandatory life sentence for murder upon Katja Wolff, with an unusual recommendation made to the Home Office that she serve no less than twenty years. According to the correspondent, who evidently had been present in the courtroom, the defendant had leapt to her feet upon hearing the sentence pronounced and demanded to speak. "Let me tell what happened," she was reported as saying. But her offer to speak now after having maintained her right to silence not only through the trial but throughout the investigation as well -smacked of panic and deal-making, and it came too late. "We know what happened," Bertram Cresswell-White, senior Treasury Counsel, declared later to the press. "We heard it from the police, we heard it from the family, we heard it from the forensic laboratory and from Miss Wolff's own friends. Placed in circumstances which she found increasingly difficult, seeking to vent her anger in a situation in which she felt she was being unfairly disciplined, and given the opportunity to rid the world of a child who was imperfect anyway, she wilfully and with malice towards the Davies family shoved Sonia Davies beneath the water in her own bathtub and held her there despite the child's pathetic struggles until she drowned. At which point, Miss Wolff raised the alarm. This is what happened. This is what was proved. And it is for this that Mr. Justice Wilkes handed down the sentence required by law." "She'll serve twenty years, Dad." Yes. Yes. That's what he says to Granddad when my father comes into the room where we are waiting for word: Granddad, Gran and I. I remember. We are in the drawing room, lined up on the sofa, myself in the middle. My mother is there as well, and she's crying. As she always is, it seems to me, not just after Sonia's death but after Sonia's birth as well. Birth is supposed to be a joyful time, but Sonia's birth could not have been. I finally realised that as I flipped the first news cutting over and looked at the second one a continuation of the front page story -that lay beneath it. For there I discovered a photograph of the victim, and to my shame I saw what I had forgotten or deliberately erased from my mind for more than two decades about my younger sister. What I'd forgotten was the first thing that Libby noticed and mentioned when she rejoined me with a second chair, towing it along behind her as she came into the news library again. Of course, she didn't know it was my sister's picture since I hadn't told her why we'd come to the Press Association office in the first place. She'd heard me ask for cuttings on the Katja Wolff trial, but that was the extent of it. Libby scooted herself to the table, half-turned towards me, and she reached for the picture, saying, "What've you got?" And then when she saw, she said, "Oh. She's Down's Syndrome, right? Who is she?" "My sister." "Really? But you've never said .. ." She looked from the picture to me. She went on carefully, either choosing her words or choosing how far she wished to go with their implications, "Were you, like .. . ashamed of her or something? I mean .. . Gosh. It's no big deal. Down's Syndrome, I mean." "Or something," I said. "I was or something. Something contemptible. Something bad." "What, then?" "I couldn't remember her. Or any of this." I gestured to the files. I couldn't remember any of this. I was eight years old, someone drowned my sister ' "Drowned your ' I clutched her arm to stop the rest. I had no need for the staff of the news library to know who I was. Believe me, my shame was great enough without having my identity attached to it openly. "Look," I told Libby tersely. "Look for yourself. And I couldn't remember her, Libby. I couldn't remember the first thing about her." "Why?" she asked. Because I didn't want to. 3 OCTOBER 10:30 P.M. I expect you to leap upon that admission with a warrior's triumph, Dr. Rose, but you say nothing. You merely watch me and while you have schooled your features to betray nothing, you have little power over the light that comes to your eyes, dark though they might be. I see it there for just an instant that spark again -and it tells me you wish me to hear what I myself have just said. I couldn't remember my sister because I didn't want to remember her. That must be the case. We don't want to remember, so we choose to forget. Except isn't the truth that sometimes we simply don't need to remember. And other times we are told to forget. Here's what I can't understand, though. My grandfather's episodes were the Great Unspoken in Kensington Square, and yet I remember them clearly. So why do I remember them and him but not my sister? He figures larger in your life than your sister, you tell me, because of your music. To repress him as you've apparently repressed the memory of Sonia Repressed? Why repressed? Are you agreeing that I haven't wanted to remembered of my sister, Dr. Rose? Repression isn't a conscious choice, you tell me, and your voice is quiet, compassionate, calm. It's associated with an emotional, psychological, or physical state too overwhelming for someone to handle, Gideon. For example, if as children we witness something terrifying or incomprehensible to us sexual intercourse between our parents is a good illustration we shove it out of our conscious awareness because at that age we have no tools to deal with what we've seen, to assimilate it in a fashion that makes sense to us. Even as adults, people who suffer horrific accidents generally have no memory of the catastrophe simply because it is horrific. We don't actively make the choice to shove an image from our mind. We simply do it. Repression is how we protect ourselves. It's how our mind protects itself from something it isn't yet prepared to face. Then what what can I not face about my sister, Dr. Rose? Although I did remember Sonia, didn't I? When I was writing about Mother, I remembered her. I'd blocked just one detail about her. Until I saw the picture, I didn't know she was Down's. So the fact that she was Down's figures in all this, doesn't it? It must because it's the one detail that had to be revealed to me. I couldn't dredge it up. Nothing led me to it. You weren't able to dredge up Katja Wolff either, you point out to me. So Down's and Katja Wolff are connected, aren't they, Dr. Rose? They must be. 5 OCTOBER I couldn't remain in the news library once I saw that picture of my sister and heard Libby voice what I myself could not say. I wanted to remain there. I had five envelopes of information in front of me, all detailing what had happened to my family twenty years ago. No doubt I would also have discovered within those envelopes every significant name of every person who had been involved in the investigation and the legal proceedings that followed it. But I found that I couldn't read any further once I saw that picture of Sonia. Because seeing that picture allowed me to visualise my sister under the water: with her so-round head turning side to side and her eyes those eyes which even in a newspaper photograph show that she was born anomalous looking looking always looking because they cannot keep themselves from looking upon her killer. This is someone she trusts, loves, depends upon, and needs who is holding her down beneath the water, and she doesn't understand. She is only two years old and even if she had been a normal child, she would not have understood what was happening. But she isn't normal. She wasn't born normal. And nothing in the two years that comprise her short life has ever been normal. Abnormality. Abnormality leading to crisis. That's it, Dr. Rose. We have lurched from crisis to crisis with my sister. Mother weeps at Mass in the morning, and Sister Cecilia knows that she needs help. Not only does she need help to cope with the fact that she has given birth to a child who is different, imperfect, unusual, outstanding or whatever else you want to call her, but she also needs practical help in caring for her. Because despite the presence of one child a prodigy and the other child handicapped by a defect of birth, life must continue, which means Gran must still be in attendance on Granddad, Dad must have two jobs as before, and if I'm to continue with the violin, Mother must work as well. The logical expense to cut is the violin and everything associated with it: release Raphael Robson from his duties, sack Sarah-Jane Beckett and send me to day school. With the enormous amount of money saved from these simple and expedient economies, Mother can stay at home with Sonia, see to her growing needs, and nurse her through the health traumas that come up continually. But making this change is unthinkable to everyone because at six and a half years old, I have already made my public debut, and to deny the world the gift of my music seems an act of egregious pettiness. Doing this, however, has certainly been mooted among my parents and grandparents. Yes. I remember now. Mother and Dad are having a discussion in the drawing room and Granddad enters into it vociferously. "Boy's a genius, a goddamn genius!" he bellows at them. And Gran is there, because I hear her anxious "Jack, Jack," and I picture her scurrying to the stereo and throwing on a Paganini for the savage breast residing directly beneath Granddad's flannel shirt. "He's already giving concerts, goddamn it," Granddad rages, "You'll cut him off from that over my dead body. So for once in your life just for flaming once, Dick will you please make the right decision?" Neither Raphael nor Sarah-Jane is involved in this debate. Their futures hang in the balance along with my own, but they have as much say in what will happen as I do, which is none at all. The dispute goes on for hours and days during my mother's convalescence from her pregnancy, and both the dispute and the difficulties of my mother's recovery are exacerbated by the health crises that Sonia experiences. The baby's been taken to the doctor ... to hospital... to casualty. There is all round us a pervasive sense of tension, urgency, and fear that has never been in the house before. People are stretched to breaking point with anxiety. Always the question hangs in the air, What will happen next? Crises. People are gone a great deal of the time. There are gaps in which no one seems at home at all. just Raphael and I. Or Sarah-Jane and I. While everyone else is with Sonia. Why? you ask. What sort of crises did Sonia have? I can only remember He says he'll meet us at the hospital. Gideon, go to your room, and the sound of Sonia's weak crying, and I can hear that crying as it fades away when they carry her downstairs and out into the night. I go to her room, which is next to mine. This is the nursery. A light has been left on, and there's some sort of machine next to her cot and straps that keep her hooked onto it while she sleeps. There is a chest of drawers with a carousel lamp on it, the same carousel lamp that I can remember watching turn round and round as I lay in my own cot, this very same cot. And I see the marks where I bit the railing, and I see the Noah's ark transfers that I used to stare at. And I climb into the cot though I am six and a half years old and I curl up there and wait for what will happen. What does happen? In time, they return as they always do, with medicine, with the name of a doctor they're to see in the morning, with a behavioural prescription or a cutting edge diet that they're to adhere to. Sometimes they have Sonia with them. Sometimes she's being kept in hospital. Which is why my mother weeps at Mass. And yes, this is what she and Sister Cecilia must be talking about when we go with her into the convent that day that I overturn the bookshelf and break the statue of the Virgin. She murmurs mostly, this nun, and I assume it's to comfort my mother, who must feel.. . what? Guilt because she's given birth to a child who's suffering one illness after the next, anxiety because the what can happen next is always loitering outside her front door, anger at the inequities of life, and sheer exhaustion from trying to cope. Out of all this fertile turbulent soil must grow the idea of hiring a nanny. A nanny could be the solution for everyone. So Katja Wolff comes to us. As things turn out, she isn't a trained nanny, however. She hasn't been to a specialised course or a college to earn a certificate in child care But she is educated and she is helpful, affectionate, grateful and it must be said affordable. She loves children, and she needs the job. And the Davies family need help. 6 OCTOBER I went to see Dad that same evening. If anyone holds the an amnestic key I'm trying to find, it's going to be my father. I found him at Jill's flat in Shepherd's Bush, on the front steps of the building, in fact. The two of them were in the midst of one of those polite but tense arguments that loving couples have when they each have reasonable desires that have come into conflict. This one apparently involved whether Jill as she approached her due date was still going to drive herself round London. Dad was saying, "That's dangerous and irresponsible. It's a wreck, that car. For God's sake, I'll send a taxi round for you. I'll drive you myself." And Jill was saying, "Would you stop treating me like a piece of Lalique? I can't even breathe when you're like this." She began to go inside the building, but he took her by the arm. He said, "Darling. Please," and I could tell how afraid for her he was. I understood. My father hadn't been blessed with luck in his children. Virginia, dead. Sonia, dead. Two out of three were not the sort of odds to give a man peace of mind. To her credit, Jill seemed to recognise this as well. She said, more quietly, "You're being silly," but I think there was a part of her that appreciated the degree to which Dad was solicitous for her well-being. And then she saw me standing on the pavement, hesitating between skulking off and striding forward with a hearty hello that attempted to demonstrate alevel of bonhomie that I did not feel. She said, "Hullo. Here's Gideon, darling," and Dad swung round, releasing her arm, which freed her to unlock the front door and usher both of us up to her flat. Jill's flat is supremely modern in a period building that was gutted several years ago by a clever developer who completely updated it within. It's all fitted carpets, copper pans hanging from the kitchen ceiling, gleaming mod cons that actually work, and paintings that look as if they intend to slide off their canvases and do something questionable on the floor. It is, in short, perfectly Jill. I wonder how my father is going to cope with her decorating preferences when at last they begin to cohabit. Not that they're not already as good as cohabiting. My father's hovering over Jill is becoming somewhat obsessive. With his paranoia about the new baby rising daily, I wondered if I should broach the subject of Sonia with him. My body told me not: I found that my head had begun a vague aching, and my stomach burned, but it burned in a way that told me I could not attribute it to anything other than nerves. Jill said, "I've got some work to do, so I'll leave you two to your own devices. I don't expect you've come to visit me, have you?" I supposed I should have considered dropping in to see Jill now and again, especially as she was to be my step-mother, odd though the proposition seemed. But I could tell by the way she asked that she was merely sorting out information and not implying anything the way so many women do. I said, "There are one or two things .. ." She said, "I expect there are. I'll be in the study," and she went in that direction. When Dad and I were alone, we repaired to the kitchen. Dad moved Jill's impressive coffee maker into the centre of the work top and fetched some espresso beans, which he poured inside. The coffee maker like the flat itself is quintessentially Jill. It's an amazing machine with a capability of producing one fresh cup of anything in less than a minute: coffee, cappuccino, espresso, latte. It steams milk and boils water and I expect it would doing the washing up, the laundry, and the hoovering if you programmed it thus. Dad used to scoff at the appliance, but I noticed that he was using it like a pro. He took out two demitasse cups and their saucers. From a bowl near the sink, he found ale mon He was searching for the proper knife with which to carve us each a curl of the peel when I spoke. "Dad, I've seen a picture of Sonia. I mean a better picture than the one you showed me. A newspaper picture from the time of the trial." He turned a dial on the coffee machine, replaced its single spout with a double one that he took from a drawer, and put the two small cups in position. He pushed a button. A gentle whirring ensued. He gave his attention to the lemon again, making a curving sliver that would have done credit to a chef at the Savoy. "I see," was all he said. He began a second slice. "Why did no one tell me about it?" I asked. "About what?" "You know. The trial. How Sonia died. Everything. Why didn't we talk about it?" He shook his head. He had finished with the second lemon peel curl as perfectly carved as was the first and when the espresso was done, he plopped a curl in each cup, and handed me mine. He said, "Out here?" and cocked his head in the direction of the sitting room off which a terrace overlooked other similar period buildings nearby. On a grey day such as this, the terrace didn't promise much comfort. But it did offer the benefit of privacy, which I wanted with Dad, so I followed him out. As I suspected, we were completely alone. Jill's outdoor furniture was already covered, but Dad removed the plastic sheeting from two of the chairs and we sat. He set his espresso on his knee and zipped his parka. He said, "I didn't keep the newspapers. I didn't look at them. What I wanted more than anything was to forget. I realise that's probably anathema to current thinking. Aren't we all supposed to wallow in recollection till we reek of the stench? But I don't come from an age when that was fashionable, Gideon. I lived through it the days and weeks and months of it and when it was over, I wanted nothing more than to forget it had ever happened." "Is that how Mother felt as well?" He lifted his cup. He drank, but he observed me as he did so. "I don't know how your mother felt. We couldn't talk about it. None of us could talk about it. To talk about it meant to relive it and living through it once was horror enough." "I need to talk about it now." "More of your Doctor Rose's sterling recommendations? Sonia loved the violin, if that's of interest to you. She loved you and the violin, more precisely. She spoke very little language comes late to a Down's child but she could say your name." That was like the precise administering of a wound, a delicate but perfectly accurate incision into my heart. I said, "Dad ' He cut in. "Never mind. That was low of me." "Why did no one speak of her afterwards?" I asked the question but the answer was obvious: We never spoke of anything unpleasant. Granddad raged like a maniac periodically; he was carted off and did not return for weeks, and we did not mention the fact at any time. Mother vanished one day, taking with her not only every possession she owned but also every reminder that she had ever been part of the family, and we did not discuss where she might have gone or why. And there I sat on my father's lover's terrace, wondering why we never spoke of Sonia life or her death when we were and had always been a group of people who spoke of nothing: nothing painful, nothing heartbreaking, nothing horrifying, nothing grievous. "We wanted to forget it had happened." "Forget Mother had happened? Forget Sonia herself had happened?" He observed me and I saw that opaqueness in his eyes, that expression that had always succeeded so well in defining a territory whose landscape was ice, bitter wind, and endless smoke-coloured sky. "That's unworthy of you," he said. "I think you know what I'm talking about." "But never to say her name. All those years. To me. Never say even the words your sister "Do you think you would have gained something had Sonia's murder become part of the daily fabric of our lives? Is that your conclusion?" "I just don't understand ' He drank down the rest of his espresso and put the cup on the terrace, next to the leg his chair. He leaned forward. His face was as grey as his hair which swept back from his forehead as my own hair does, with that very same widow's peak in the centre, with those same indentations like fjords on either side. He said, "Your sister was drowned in her bath. She was drowned by a German girl we'd taken into our home." "I know ' "Nothing. That's what you know. You know what the papers might have told you but you don't know what it was to be there. You don't know that Sonia was murdered because she was growing progressively more difficult to care for and because the German girl ' Katja Wolff, I thought. Why won't he say her name? ' was pregnant." Pregnant. The word was a snap of the fingers in front of my face. The word brought me back to my father's world and what he had lived through and what the present circumstances were asking him to live through again. I thought back to the picture of Katja Wolff smiling dreamily up at the camera in the Kensington Square garden with Sonia in her arms. I thought of the picture of her leaving the police station, stick thin and ill-looking with features sharpened by excessive weight loss. Pregnant. I murmured, "She didn't look pregnant in the photo," and I looked away from Dad to one of the other terraces where, I noticed, an Old English sheep dog was watching us curiously. As he saw me take note of him, he rose on his hind legs, front paws on the iron rail that surrounded the terrace. He began to bark. I shivered at the sound. He'd had his vocal cords removed and what remained was a hopeful but pathetic yelp that was air and muscle and mostly cruelty. It made me feel sick. Dad said, "What photo?" And then he must have realised because he said, "It wouldn't have shown. She was deadly ill at the start of her pregnancy, so she didn't put on weight, she lost it. We noticed first that she'd gone off food, that she didn't look well, and we thought it was a lover's tiff of some kind. She and the lodger ' "That would've been James." "Yes. James. They were close. Obviously, a hell of a lot closer than we originally assumed. He liked to help her with her English when she had free time. We had no objection to that. Until she became pregnant." "Then what?" "We told her she'd have to go. We weren't running a home for unmarried mothers, and we needed someone whose attention would stay on Sonia, not on herself: her illness, her difficulty, her condition, whatever you want to call it. We didn't throw her out on the street or even tell her she had to leave at once. But as soon as she was able to find another .. . situation, job, she would have to go. That would have taken her away from James, though, and she snapped." "Snapped?" "Tears, anger, hysteria. She couldn't cope. Not with pregnancy, unremitting illness, looming homelessness, and your sister as well. Sonia was just out of hospital at the time. She needed constant care. The German girl snapped." "I remember." "What?" I could hear the reluctance behind the question, that conflict between Dad's desire to put an end to a reminiscence that was painful for him and his wish to liberate from a prison of mind the son he loved. "Crises. Sonia being carried to the doctor, to hospital, to ... I don't know where else." He sank back in his chair and, like me, looked over at the dog who so wanted our attention. He said, "No place for a creature with complicated needs," and I couldn't tell if he was referring to the animal, to himself, to me, or to my sister. "At first it was her heart. An atrioseptal defect, it was called. It wasn't long just after her birth when we knew from her colour and her pulse that there was trouble. So they performed an operation on her and we thought, Right. That's taken care of the problem. But then it was her stomach: duodenal steno sis Very common among Down's children, we were told. As if her being Down's in the first place was as minor an issue as the poor creature having a wandering eye. More surgery then. After that, imperforate anus. Hmm, we were told, this particular little one appears to be at the farthest extreme of the syndrome. So many problems. Let's see if we can cut her open again. And again. And again. And then give her hearing aids. And bottles of medicine. And of course, we can only hope she'll be happy to have her body invaded and probed and rearranged on a regular basis till we get her sorted out." "Dad.. ." I wanted to prevent the rest. He'd said enough. He'd gone through enough: not only to have lived through her suffering but also to have lived through her death. And before that death, to have borne his own grief, my mother's, and no doubt his parents' .. . Before I could finish what I'd wanted to say to him, I heard my grandfather all at once again. I felt the breath leave me as if I'd taken a punch to the gut, but I had to ask. I said, "Dad, how did Granddad cope with all this?" "Cope? He wouldn't attend the trial. He ' "I don't mean the trial. I mean Sonia. How she .. . how she was." And I can hear him, Dr. Rose. I can hear him howling as he always howled Lear like although the storm that raged round him was not of the moors but of his own mind. Freaks! he's shouting. You're capable of giving me nothing but freaks! There's spittle at the corners of his mouth and although my grandmother takes his arm and murmurs his name, he hears and is aware of nothing but the wind and the rain and the thunder in his head. Dad said, "Your grandfather was a troubled man, Gideon. But a great and good man. His demons were fierce, but so was his battle against them." "Did he love her?" I asked. "Did he hold her? Did he play with her? Did he think of her as his grandchild?" "Sonia was ill for a great part of the time she was with us. She was fragile. She went through one trauma after another." "So he didn't, did he?" I asked my father. "He didn't.. . anything." Dad made no reply. Instead, he rose and walked to the railing. The old English sheep dog yelped in near soundless ness pawing at his own rails with an eagerness that was as obvious as it was pathetic. "Why do they do that to animals?" Dad said. "For the love of God, it's so bloody unnatural. If people want a pet, they should accommodate the pet. If they don't, they should damn well get rid of it." "You aren't going to tell me, are you?" I asked him. "About Granddad and Sonia. You aren't going to tell me." "Your grandfather was who your grandfather was," my father replied. And that was the end of it. Chapter Eight Liberty Neale knew that if she'd only had the luck to meet Rock Peters somewhere in Mexico and to marry him there, she wouldn't have been in her current position because she could have divorced the creep in a micro flash and that would have been the end of it. But no, she hadn't met him in Mexico. She hadn't even gone to Mexico. She'd come to England because she'd been such a total zero in foreign language in high school that England was the closest place to California that resembled a foreign country, where people spoke a language that Libby understood. Canada hardly counted. She would have preferred France she had a major thing for croissants, although the less said about that the better but a few days in London had provided her with a wider range of eating experiences than she'd anticipated, so she'd managed to settle in happily, out of the reach of her parents and, more importantly, thousands of miles away from that living example of human perfection, her older sister. Equality Neale was tall, thin, intelligent, articulate, and disgustingly successful at everything she did. And she'd been elected homecoming queen at Los Altos High School which was enough to make anyone blow major chunks into the next time zone. So getting away from Ali had been priority numero uno, and London had made that possible. But in London, Libby had met Rock Peters. In London, she had married the creep. And in London where she hadn't yet got around to scoring anything closely resembling a work permit or a permanent resident's card despite her marriage she was at Rock's mercy, whereas in Mexico, it would have been 'kiss my ass, Jack', and money or not, she could have gotten away from him. She still wouldn't have had the bucks to do it, but that wouldn't have mattered because the thumb spoke a universal language and she wasn't afraid to put herself out on the road and use it. Which was something she couldn't do from England since hitching a ride across the Atlantic to get away from Rock wasn't exactly possible. Rock had her .. . well, he had her by the balls, figuratively speaking. She wanted to stay in England because she didn't want to go home and admit defeat when every letter she got from California was filled to the brim with Ali's latest success. But to stay in England, she needed money. And to get money, she needed Rock. True, she could have made some bucks even more illegally than she was already making them, but getting caught would have meant getting deported which would have meant back to Los Altos Hills, back to Mom and Dad, and back to "Why don't you go to work for Ali for a time, Lib? In public relations, you could blah blah blah. No way in hell, Libby told herself, was she going to put herself anywhere near her sister. She'd smashed up Ali's BMW just before she left for England. It had felt oh so good at the time just what Ali needed to get her attention but the sisters had parted on the worst of terms. So she was stuck here with Rock, and she was basically his slave. Which was why she was back to screwing the shithead two or three times a week upon demand. She'd try to avoid it, usually by pointing out that there was a delivery needing to be made and since she was the most reliable of his couriers, shouldn't she make it? But that usually didn't work because when Rock wanted sex, Rock wanted sex, and it never took him much time to ride the train to the station anyway. That was what had happened this day, back in the Bermondsey hovel above the grocery store where, if she concentrated on the traffic noises below, she'd always been able to avoid hearing Rock grunting in her ear like a constipated pig. As always, she'd been so pissed off after screwing him that she wanted to amputate his cock with a saw. That not being possible, she'd gone to her tap dancing lesson instead. She'd tapped herself into the sweat of the century, shuffling, chugging, flapping, and spanking till she was dripping wet. The instructor kept yelling, "Libby, what are you doing over there?" above the strains of "On the Sunny Side of the Street', but Libby had ignored her. It hadn't mattered whether she was in step, out of step, in line, out of line, or even in the same hemisphere as her fellow tappers. What mattered was doing something hard, something fast, something that was demanding and physical in order to put Rock Peters from her mind. If she didn't do that, she'd end up in front of the closest refrigerator, and approximately six billion calories later, she'd find herself recovered from Rock's brand of blackmail. "Think of it this way, Lib," he'd say when it was over and she lay beneath him defeated again, "It's tit for tat, pardon the pun' and he'd offer that grin she'd first thought so cool and later learned to recognise for the sign of contempt it actually was. "You scratch my itch and I scratch yours. "Sides, you're not getting any from the fiddler, are you? I know when a bird's been rogered proper and you've the look of someone who hasn't had a decent shagging in more'n a year." "That's right, I haven't, you total dickhead," she'd snap. "Think about it, Rock. And he's not a fiddler. He plays the violin." "Ooooh. Pardon my French," he'd say. And it mattered exactly zero to the former Rocco Petrocelli that she'd put down his ability as a lover. To him, success in bed meant getting his rocks off. What happened to his partner was left to self-stimulation or total coincidence. Libby departed the dance studio in a better frame of mind, her leotard and tap shoes stuffed into her backpack and that outfit replaced by the leathers which she wore when she made her courier stops. Helmet under her arm, she strode to the Suzuki and she used the kick starter instead of the electric ignition, the better to think about tromping on Rock's face. The streets were clogged like, when weren't they clogged?-but she'd spent enough time on the bike to know not only which side streets to take but also how to squeeze between cars and delivery trucks when traffic had come to a standstill. She had a Walkman that she usually wore on deliveries, the recorder tucked into an inner pocket of her leathers and the helmet holding the earphones in place. She liked bubble gum music, she liked it loud, and she generally sang along because the combination of music blasting against her ear drums and her own voice singing at maximum volume pretty much took care of whatever was left in her head that she didn't want to think about. But she didn't use the Walkman today. The tap dancing had wiped the image of Rock's hairy body mashed on top of her and his salami red cock shoving between her legs. And as for the rest of what was in her head: That was something she wanted to think about. Rock was right: She still hadn't gotten Gideon Davies to bed as in really to bed and she couldn't figure out why. He seemed to like being with her, and he seemed normal in every way other than what wasn't happening between them in the sack. Yet in all the time she'd been living below him and hanging out with him, they'd never progressed beyond the point where they'd been that first night when they fell asleep on her bed while listening to a CD. That was it with a capital I as far as the sex part went. At first she'd thought the dude was gay and her radar had gone totally down for the count after being with Rock for so long. But he didn't act gay or do the gay scene in London or even have younger guys, older guys, or obviously twisted guys up to his place in private. All he had was his dad who hated her guts and was all Mr. Major Attitude whenever she and he were actually breathing the same air for five seconds and Rafe Robson who hung around Gideon day and night like a case of the hives. All of this had long ago made Libby conclude that there was nothing strictly wrong with Gideon that a decent relationship couldn't straighten out... if she could just get him away from his keepers for a while. Having left the South Bank where her tap lesson was, having woven her way through the City and upwards to Pentonville Road, she opted to shoot through the by-ways of Camden Town rather than take on the crush of cars, taxis, buses, and trucks that were always making a mess of every street within spitting distance of King's Cross Station. Her route to Chalcot Square wasn't a direct one as a result, but that was cool as far as Libby was concerned. She didn't mind having more time to plan an approach that might work as a breakthrough with Gideon. To her way of thinking, Gideon Davies had to be more than simply a man who'd been playing the violin since he was just out of diapers. Yeah, it was cool that he was a major big deal as a musician, but he was also a person, And that person was more than just the music he made. That person could exist whether he played the violin or not. When Libby finally arrived in Chalcot Square, the first thing she saw was that Gideon wasn't alone. Raphael Robson's ancient Renault stood at the south edge of the square, parked with one wheel on the sidewalk like he'd been in a hurry. Through the lit window to Gideon's music room, Libby noted that the unmistakable shape of Rafe handkerchief, as always, mopping up the sweat on his face was moving about, and he was talking. Preaching, more likely. And Libby knew about what. "Shit," she muttered as she gunned up to the house. She revved the engine a few times in the cause of letting off steam and she pulled the Suzuki onto its kick stand. Rafe Robson didn't usually turn up in Chalcot Square at this time of day, and to have him here now was a real bummer that, in combination with what she'd already been through, having to screw Rock Peters, really ticked her off. She shoved through the gate in the wrought iron railing and didn't stop it from clanging against the concrete that defined the upper steps to the house. She flung herself downwards, banged her way into the basement flat, and without a second thought dived straight for the refrigerator. She'd been trying to stay on the No White Diet, but now tap dancing be damned she was definitely craving something pale. Vanilla ice cream, popcorn, rice, potatoes, cheese. She thought she might freak if she didn't have it. Months ago, however, she'd prepared the refrigerator door for a moment just like this. Before she could open the appliance, she was forced to look at a picture of herself at sixteen years of age, a tubbo in a one piece bathing suit standing next to her size five sister in a butt floss bikini.. . and with a perfect tan, of course. Libby had put a sticker over Ali's face: a spider wearing a cowboy hat. But now she peeled the sticker off, gazing long and hard upon her sister, and just for good measure she read the message that she'd penned for herself across the refrigerator door. IN THROUGH THE LIPS AND ONTO THE HIPS. She took her inspiration where she could. She sighed and backed off, which was when she heard it: the violin music floating down from above. She thought for a moment, "Omigod! He's cracked it," and she felt a surge of pleasure at the realisation that Gideon's problems might be over, that his most recent plan for solving his problem had actualy done the job. This was very cool. This would make him happy. And it had to be Gideon who was playing upstairs. It wouldn't, after all, be Rafe Robson who couldn't possibly be so uncool as to torture Gid by playing the violin in front of him while Gid was having such trouble playing himself. But just as she was celebrating the fact of Gideon Davies' return to his music, the rest of the orchestra started grinding away. A CD, Libby thought despairingly. It was Rafe's little pep talk for Gideon's ears: See how you once played the music, Gideon? You did it then. You can do it now. Why, Libby wondered, wouldn't they leave him the hell alone? Did they think he'd start playing if they bugged him enough? Because they sure as hell were beginning to bug her. "He's more than this stupid music," she snarled at the ceiling above her. She left the kitchen and marched to her own small CD player. There, she selected a disk that was guaranteed to drive Raphael Robson right up the wall. It was bubble gum squared, and she played it loud. Just for good measure, she opened her windows. Banging on the floor above ensued in short order. She turned the volume up to full blast. Time for a nice long bath, she thought. Bubble gum music was, like, so perfect for soaking, soaping, and singing along. Thirty minutes later, bathed and dressed, Libby turned off the CD player and listened for any more sounds from above. Silence. She'd made her point. She left the flat and popped her head above the level of the street to see if Rafe's car was still in the square. The Renault was gone, which meant Gideon might be free from his keepers and ready for a visit from someone who cared more about him as a person than as a musician. She trotted up the stairs from her flat to his front door where she gave a hardy knock. No answer prompted her to turn back to the square, taking a look for Gideon's Mitsubishi and seeing the GPS five cars along. Libby frowned, gave another knock, and called out, "Gideon? You still in there? It's me." This roused him. The dead bolt was released from the other side of the door. The door swung open. Libby said, "Hey, sorry about the music. I sort of lost control and ' She cut her own words off. He looked like hell. True, he hadn't looked good in weeks, but now he was positively bird-do on a cracker. Libby's first thought was that Rafe Robson had worked Gideon over by making him listen to his own recordings. Bastard, she thought. She said, "Where's good ol' Rafe? Gone to make his report to your dad?" Gideon merely stepped back from the door and let her in. He went up the stairs, and she followed him. His destination was where he'd obviously been when she'd knocked on his door: the bedroom. The imprint of his head on the pillow and his body on the bed looked pretty recent. A dim light was burning on the bedside table and the shadows not dispelled by its glow fell on Gideon's face and made him look cadaverous. He'd been surrounded by an aura of anxiety and defeat since the Wigmore debacle, but Libby saw that there was something more edging that aura now, something that looked .. . what? Excruciating, she realised. So she said, "Gideon, what's wrong?" He said simply, "My mother's been murdered." She blinked. Her jaw dropped. She snapped it closed. "Your mom? Your mother? Oh no. When? How? Holy shit. Sit down." She urged him over to his bed and he sat, his hands hanging limply between his knees. "What happened?" Gideon told her what little there was to know. He concluded with, "Dad was asked to identify her body. The police've been to see him since. A detective, Dad said. He rang a while ago." Gideon clutched his arms around himself, bent forward, and rocked like a child. He said, "That's it, then." "What?" Libby asked. "There's no hope after this." "Don't say that, Gideon." "I might as well be dead, too." "Geez. Hey. Don't say that." "It's the truth." He shivered as he said this and glanced round the room as if looking for something while he continued to rock. Libby thought about what it meant that his mother was dead. She said, "Gideon, you're going to get through all this. You're going to get past it," and she tried to sound like she really meant those words, like whether he played his music or not was as important to her as it was to him. She noticed that his shivering had turned to trembling. At the foot of his bed was a knitted blanket, and she grabbed this and dropped it around his thin shoulders. "You want to talk about it?" she asked him. "About your mom? About... I don't know .. . anything?" She sat beside him and put her arm around him. She used her other hand to close the blanket at his throat till he grasped it as well and clutched it. He said, "She was on her way to see James the Lodger." "Who?" "James Pitchford. He lived with us when my sister was .. . when she died. And it's odd because I'd been thinking of him recently, although before that he hadn't crossed my mind in years." Gideon grimaced then, and Libby noticed that the hand not clutching the blanket was pressed into his stomach as if something inside were burning his guts. "Someone ran her down in James Pitchford's street," he said. "More than once, Libby. And because she was on her way to see James, Dad thinks the police are going to want to track down everyone who was involved .. . back then." "Why?" "Because of the kind of questions they asked him, I dare say." "I don't mean why does he think the cops want to track down everyone. I mean why would they want to track down everyone. Is there a connection between then and now? I mean, obviously if your mom was going to see James Pitchford, there's some sort of connection. But if someone from twenty years ago killed her, why wait till now to do it?" Gideon bent forward farther, his face contorted with pain. He said, "God. It feels like a coal's burning right through me." "Here, then." Libby lowered him to bed. He curled on his side, his legs drawn up to his chest. She removed his shoes. His feet were sock less and as pale as milk, and he rubbed them together spasmodically, as if the friction could take his mind from the pain. Libby lowered herself next to him, spooning her body into his beneath the blanket. She insinuated her hand beneath his arm and laid her palm on his stomach. She could feel his spine curved into her, every knob of it like a marble. He'd become so thin that she wondered how he kept his bones from poking through his papery skin. She said, "I bet you've had a brain lock on this stuff, huh? Well, forget about it. Not for always. Just for now. Lay here with me and just forget." "I can't," he said, and he gave a bitter laugh. "Remembering everything is my assignment." His feet rubbed. He curled into himself further still. Libby held him closer. He finally said, "She's out of gaol, Libby. Dad knew, but he didn't tell me. That's why the police want to look at twenty years ago. She's out of gaol." "Who is? You mean .. . ?" "Katja Wolff." "Do they think she might have run down your mom?" "I don't know." "Why would she? It makes more sense that your mom would want to run down her." "In the normal way of things," Gideon said. "Except nothing about my life has been normal, so there's no reason why my mother's death should be normal either." "Your mom must have testified against her," Libby said. "And she could have spent her time locked up planning to get everyone who put her there. But if she did, how'd she find your mom, Gideon? I mean, you didn't even know where she was. How could this Wolff chick have tracked her down? And if she did track her down, and if she did kill her, why'd she kill her on this Pitchford guy's street?" Libby thought about her question and then answered them herself. "To give Pitchford a message?" "Or to give someone else one." A phone call relayed to Barbara Havers what Lynley had learned from Richard Davies, including the name she needed to gain access to the Convent of the Immaculate Conception. There, he told her, she should find someone who could give her the whereabouts of a Sister Cecilia Mahoney. The convent sat on a piece of land that was probably worth a king's ransom, tucked among a host of listed properties dating from the 1690s. This would have been where the movers and shakers had built their rural retreats during the time that William and Mary had built their own little humble country cottage in Kensington Gardens. Now the movers and shakers in the square were the employees of several business establishments that had shoe-horned themselves into the historic buildings, denizens of a second convent where the bloody hell did nuns get the lolly to have digs round here? Barbara wondered and inhabitants of a number of homes that had probably been handed down through families for more than three hundred years. Unlike some of the city squares that had suffered bomb damage or the ravages of greed from consecutive Tory governments with big business, vast profits, and the privatisation of everything in mind, Kensington Square stood largely untouched, with four sides of distinguished buildings overlooking a central garden where the fallen autumn leaves made an umber skirt on the lawn beneath each tree. Parking was impossible, so Barbara pulled her Mini onto the pavement at the northwest edge of the square where a strategically placed bollard prevented the traffic from the distant high street from creating a short cut and disturbing the quiet of the neighbourhood. She shoved her police identification onto what went for the Mini's dashboard. She clambered out and shortly found herself in the company of Sister Cecilia Mahoney who was still a resident of the convent and who was, when Barbara called, at work in the chapel next door. Barbara's first thought upon encountering the nun was that she didn't look much like one. Nuns were supposed to be women two or three decades past their prime who wore heavy black robes, clanking rosary beads, and veils and wimples from the Middle Ages. Cecilia Mahoney didn't fit this picture. In fact when Barbara was directed to the chapel to find her, her first assumption when she saw the figure up on a small step ladder with a can of marble polish in her hand was that she was a tartan-skirted cleaning woman since cleaning an altar that featured a statue of Jesus pointing to His own exposed, anatomically incorrect, and partially gilded heart was what she was doing. Barbara told this woman that, pardon me but she was looking for Sister Cecilia Mahoney, whereupon the woman turned and said with a smile, "Then it's me you're looking for," in a brogue that sounded as if she'd just landed from Killarney. Barbara identified herself, and the nun took some care in climbing down from the steps. She said, "Police, is it? Why, you haven't the look of a policeman at all. Is there some sort of trouble, Constable?" The chapel was dimly lit, but down from the steps Sister Cecilia put herself into a pool of rose light created by a single votive candle that burned on the altar she was polishing. It did much to flatter her, smoothing away the lines on her middle-aged face and casting highlights into hair that was short but whose curls as black and as shiny as obsidian couldn't be disciplined even by the slides she used to manage them. She had violet eyes, darkly lashed, and they looked upon Barbara kindly. Barbara said, "Is there somewhere we can go to have a word?" The nun said, "Sad to say, Constable, it's unlikely that we'll be disturbed in here if it's privacy you're wanting. Time was that would have been out of the question. But these days .. . even the students who live in our dormitory only frequent the chapel when they've got an exam and are hoping for God's intervention in the matter. Come. Let's go up here and you can tell me what it is that you're wanting to know." She smiled, revealing perfect white teeth, and went on to say, as if in explanation of her smile, "Or is it that you're wanting to join us in the convent, Constable Havers?" "It might give me the fashion make-over I need," Barbara admitted. Sister Cecilia laughed. "Come this way. It'll be a bit warmer by the main altar. I've an electric fire there for the Monsignor when he says Mass in the morning. He's become a bit arthritic, poor man." Taking her cleaning supplies in hand, she led Barbara up the single centre aisle in the chapel, beneath a deep blue ceiling punctuated by gilded stars. Barbara saw that it was a church of women: Apart from the statue of Jesus and a stained glass window dedicated to St. Michael, all other windows and statues were female: St. Theresa of Lisieux, St. Clare, St. Catherine, St. Margaret. And atop the ornamental pillars on either side of each of the windows were carvings of even more women. "Here we are." Sister Cecilia went to one side of the altar and switched on a large electric fire. As it began to heat, the nun explained that she'd continue her work right here in the sanctuary if the constable didn't mind. There was this altar to be seen to as well: the candlesticks and the marble to be polished, a reredos to be dusted, and altar cloths to be replaced. "But you might wish to sit by the fire, my dear. The cold seeps in." As Sister Cecilia set to her cleaning, Barbara told her that she'd brought what might be bad news for the nun. Her name had been found inside several books on the lives of saints "Not a surprise, I hope, considering my calling," Sister Cecilia murmured as she removed the brass candlesticks from the altar and set them carefully on the floor next to Barbara. She went on to the altar cloths, folding and placing them over an ornate altar rail. She then fished in her bucket and brought out a jar and some rags, which she took with her to work upon the altar. Barbara told her that the books in question had been among a collection kept by a woman who'd died the previous evening. There had been a note penned to that woman as well, a note written by Sister Cecilia herself. "She was called Eugenie Davies," Barbara said. Sister Cecilia hesitated. She'd just scooped up a palmful of marble polish and she held it motionless as she said, "Eugenie? Oh, I'm sorry to hear that, I am. It's been years since I last saw the poor woman. Was it sudden, her passing?" "She was murdered," Barbara said. "In West Hampstead. On her way to see a bloke called J. W. Pitchley, who was once James Pitchford." Sister Cecilia moved to the altar slowly, like an underwater diver in a strong, cold current. She smoothed some polish onto the marble, using small round strokes, as her lips worked their way round a thought or a prayer. "We've learned," Barbara said, 'that the killer of the daughter a woman called Katja Wolff has recently got out of prison as well." The nun turned from the altar at this, saying, "You can't be thinking poor Katja had anything to do with this." Poor Katja. Barbara said, "Did you know the girl?" "Of course I knew her. She lodged here at the convent before she went to work for the Davies family. They lived at that time just along the square." Katja had been a refugee from the former East Germany, Sister Cecilia explained, and she went on to relate the facts of the girl's immigration to England. She had dreamed as all girls dream. She had been born in Dresden of parents who believed in the system of economy and government under which they had lived. A teenager during the second world war, her father had seen the worst that could happen when nations engage in conflict and he embraced the lifestyle of equality for the masses, believing that only communism and socialism held out the promise that global destruction would not occur. As good party workers with no members of the intelligentsia in their past for whose sins they would have had to pay, the family prospered under this system. From Dresden they moved to East Berlin. "But Katja wasn't like the rest of them," Sister Cecilia said. "Indeed, Constable, God love the girl, but wasn't Katja Wolff living proof that children are born with their personalities intact." Unlike her parents and her four siblings, Katja hated the atmosphere of socialism and the omnipresence of the State. She hated the fact that their lives were 'described, prescribed, and circumscribed' from birth. And in East Berlin so close to the West by the presence of that other half of the city just a few hundred yards across No Man's Land she got her first taste of what could be if she only could escape the land of her birth. For from East Berlin for the first time she could see western television and from westerners who travelled to the East on business, she could learn what life was like in what she came to call The World of Bright Colours. "She was expected to go to university, to study in one field of science or another, to marry, and to have babies who would be looked after by the State," Sister Cecilia explained. "This is what her sisters were doing and this is what her parents intended her to do as well. But she wanted to be a fashion designer." Sister Cecilia turned from the altar with a smile. "And can you not imagine, Constable Havers, how that idea was greeted by members of the Party with other plans for the girl?" So she escaped and in escaping as she'd escaped, she gained a degree of celebrity that had brought her to the attention of the convent, where there existed a programme for political refugees: one year at the convent to have shelter and food, to learn the language, and to assimilate into the culture if they could. "She came to us with not a word of English and only the clothes on her back, Constable. She was with us that full year before she went to the Davies family to help out with the new baby." "Is that when you got to know them?" Sister Cecilia shook her head. "It was years and years that I'd known Eugenie. She attended Mass here, so she was familiar to all of us, she was. We spoke now and again and I lent her a book or two which is what you must have seen amongst her collection but it was only after Sonia's birth that I came to know her better." "I saw a picture of the little girl." "Ah, yes." Sister Cecilia rubbed polish along the front of the altar, tucking her cloth into its ornate carving. "Eugenie was devastated when that baby was born. And I suppose any mother would feel the same. A period of adjustment is necessary isn't it when a child is born who isn't what we expect her to be. And indeed, it must have been worse for Eugenie and her husband than it might have been for other parents, because their first child was so gifted, you see." "The violin player. Right. We know about him." "Yes. Young Gideon. An astonishing lad." Sister Cecilia lowered herself to her knees and saw to the elaborate barley sugar column at the end of the altar. She said, "Eugenie didn't talk about little Sonia at first. All of us knew she was pregnant, of course, and we knew when she'd delivered the child. But the first we knew anything was wrong was when she returned to Mass one or two weeks later." "She told you then?" "Ah no. Poor thing. She just wept. Wept her eyes out every morning for three or four days, there at the back of the chapel with that poor frightened little boy at her side, stroking her arm and watching her with those big eyes of his and trying to comfort her. As for us at the Immaculate Conception, none of us had actually seen the infant, you understand. I'd gone to the house. But Eugenie was never "available for visitors"." Sister Cecilia clucked and went back to her bucket of cleaning items from which she took another rag and set about buffing. "When I finally spoke to Eugenie and learned the truth from her, I understood her sorrow. But not the depth of it, Constable. That, I must tell you, I never understood. Now perhaps it's because I'm not a mother, and have no idea what it's like to give birth to a child who isn't perfect as the world deems perfection, but it seemed to me then and it seems to me now -that God gives us what we're meant to have. We may not understand His reason for giving us what He gives us at the moment we're given it, but there is a plan for us which time allows us to comprehend." She rested on her heels and looked over her shoulder at Barbara, softening what she seemed to feel might be harsh words by adding, "But then, that's an easy thing for one such as myself to say, isn't it, Constable? Here I am she extended her arms 'surrounded by God's love manifesting itself in a thousand different ways every day. Who am I to judge another's ability -or lack of such to accept the will of God when I myself have been blessed with so much? Will you see to the candlesticks for me, dear? There's a tin of polish in the bucket there." Barbara said, "Oh. Right. Sorry." She rooted through the bucket for the appropriate tin and a rag whose black spots suggested it was the correct one to use on the candlesticks. Housewifely chores were not exactly her line, but she reckoned she could do a job on the brass without destroying it permanently. "When was the last time you talked to Mrs. Davies?" "That would have been soon after Sonia's death. There was a service for the child." Sister Cecilia looked down at her polishing rag. "Eugenie wouldn't hear of a Catholic funeral because she'd stopped attending Mass herself. Her faith was gone: that God would have given her such an afflicted child in the first place and taken the child in such a way .. . Eugenie and I never spoke again. I tried to see her. I wrote to her as well. But she would have none of me, none of my faith, none of the Church. In the end I had to leave her to God and I only pray the dear woman found peace at last." Barbara frowned, candlestick in one hand and polish tin in the other. There was a vital part of the story that was missing and it was named Katja Wolff. She said, "How exactly did the German girl end up working in the Davies household?" "That was my doing." Sister Cecilia got to her feet with a little grunt. She genuflected in front of the tabernacle at the centre of the altar and then began to attack its marble sides. "Katja needed employment at the end of her year here at the convent. A position with the Davies family, which included her room and board, would have allowed her to save for design college. It seemed a solution falbricated by God because Eugenie so needed someone to help her." "And then the baby was killed." Sister Cecilia looked over at her, one hand on the tabernacle. She said nothing but her face, muscles loosening so that expression was drained from it entirely, spoke the inference that she herself did not make. Barbara said, "Have you stayed in contact with anyone else from that time, Sister Cecilia?" "It's Katja you're asking about, is it, Constable?" Barbara prised the lid from the brass polish and said, "If you like." "I went once a month for two years to see her. First while she was on remand in Holloway, then when she was imprisoned. She spoke to me only once, in the beginning, when she was arrested. Then not again." "What did she say?" "That she did not kill Sonia." "Did you believe her?" "I did." But then, she would have had to do so, Barbara thought, because believing that Katja Wolff had murdered a child would have been a monstrous burden to carry through the rest of her life, especially for the woman devoted or not to an omnipotent and sagacious God who had facilitated the German girl's placement in that family. She said, "Have you heard from Katja Wolff since she got out of prison, Sister Cecilia?" "Indeed, I have not." "Would there be any reason, aside from a need to declare her innocence, that she might have contacted Eugenie Davies once she was released?" "None at all," Sister Cecilia said firmly. "You're certain of that?" "I am. If Katja were to contact anyone at all from that terrible time, it would be no one from the Davies family. It would be myself. But I've not heard from her." She sounded so positive, Barbara thought. She sounded so firm. Indeed, she sounded as if there were no wiggle room whatever in what she had to say in the matter. Barbara asked her why. "Because of the baby," Sister Cecilia said. "Sonia?" "No. Katja's own child, the child she had in prison. When he was born, she asked me to place him with a family. So if she's out of prison and dwelling on her past, I think it's safe to say that what she wants is to know what happened to her son." Chapter Nine Yasmin Edwards locked up her shop for the evening the way she always did: with maximum care. Most of the businesses on Manor Place had been boarded up for ages, and they were suffering the way derelict buildings usually suffered south of the river: They had become the urban outdoor canvases for graffiti artists, and where they had front windows and not sheets of either steel or plywood, those windows were broken. Yasmin Edwards' shop was one of the few new or resurrected businesses in the Kennington neighbourhood, apart from two pubs which had long survived the urban rot that had invaded the street. But then when did pubs not survive and when wouldn't they survive as long as there was drink to be served and blokes like Roger Edwards to guzzle it? She tested the padlock that she'd put through the hasp, and she made certain that the grillwork was fixed properly in place. That done, she scooped up the four carrier bags which she'd filled inside the shop, and she walked in the direction of home. Home was in the Doddington Grove Estate, a short distance away. She lived in Arnold House had lived there for the last five years since her release from Holloway and from the hoop-jumping she'd had to do in open conditions and she was lucky to have a flat that overlooked the horticultural centre across the street. It wasn't a park, a common, or a garden square, true. But it was green and it was a bit of nature and that's what she wanted for Daniel. He was only eleven and he'd spent most of her prison term in care thanks to her younger brother who 'couldn't cope with a kid, Yas, look I'm sorry but it's just a fac', in nit and she was determined to make it up to her son in every possible way that she could. He was waiting for her just outside the lift, across the strip of tarmac that did for the Arnold House car park. But he wasn't alone, and when Yasmin saw who was chatting to her son, she doubled her pace. The neighbourhood wasn't a bad one could have been a lot worse and wasn't that the truth?-but candy men and chicken hawks could turn up anywhere, and if one of them so much suggested to her son that there was a life to be had outside of school, homework and study, she would kill the flaming bastard. This bloke looked just like a candy man with his expensive togs and the glitter of a gold watch in the lights from the car park. And he had the patter as well. Because as Yasmin approached, calling, "Dan, what you doing out here this time of day?" she could see that the man had her son in thrall. Both of them turned. Daniel called out, "Hi, Mum. Sorry. Forgot my key." The man said nothing. Yasmin said, "Why'd you not come by the shop, then, tell me?" with all her suspicions on top alert. Daniel dropped his head like he always did when he was embarrassed about something. He said, examining his trainer-shod feet Nikes that had cost her a fortune "Went over to the Army Centre, Mum. A bloke was inspecting them and they were all lined up outside and they let me watch and after they let me stay for tea." Charity, Yasmin thought. Sodding chanty. "They not think you had a home to go to?" she demanded. "They know me, Mum. They know you. One said, "Isn't your mummy the lady got the beads in her hair? Right pretty, she is." Yasmin harrumphed. She'd been studiously ignoring her son's companion. She handed over two of the carrier bags to her son, said, "Mind how you go with these. You've some washing to do," and punched in the code to call the lift. That was when the man spoke, saying in a voice that was south of the river like hers, but more deeply influenced by West Indian roots, "Missus Edwards, that right?" "I already had too much of what you're selling," she replied, but she spoke to the lift door and not to him. She said, "Daniel?" and he came to stand in front of her to wait for the lift. She put a protective hand on his shoulder. Daniel peered round at the man. She straightened him back to face the lift. "Winston Nkata," the man then said. "New Scotland Yard." That got her attention. He extended a identity card which she looked at before she looked at him. A copper, she thought. A brother and a copper. There was only one thing worse than a brother who was a raasclat and that was a brother who joined the Bill. She dismissed the identification with a toss of her head, and the beads at the end of her multitude of plaits offered him the music of her contempt. He was looking at her the way men always looked at her and she knew what he saw and what he was thinking. What he saw: the body, all six feet of her; the face coloured walnut, a face that could have been like a model's face with a model's bones and a model's skin except that her lip her upper lip, this was was split permanently and scarred like an exploding purple rose where that bastard Roger Edwards had broken a vase against it when she wouldn't give him her Sainsbury wages or go on the game to support his habit; the eyes, coloured coffee and angry, angry but wary as well; and if she took her coat off in the cold evening air, he'd see the rest of her but especially the summertime cropped top she wore because her stomach was flat and her skin there was smooth and if she wanted to show off a smooth, tight stomach then she was going to, no matter the weather. That's what he saw. And what he thought? What they all thought, what they always thought: Wouldn't mind doing her long as she wears a bag on her head. He said, "C'n I have a word, Missus Edwards?" and he sounded the way they always sounded, like they'd lay in front of a bus for their mummies. The lift arrived and the door slid open slowly, like there was melted cheese on its track. It slid like it was saying if you were so stupid as to get in and ride it to the third floor where you had your flat, you might not get out because the door might decide not to open again. She tapped Daniel's shoulder to move him inside. The cop said, "Missus Edwards? C'n I have a word with you?" She said, "Like I've a choice?" and punched the button marked three. The cop said, "Cheers," and got inside. He was big. That was what she noticed first in the harsh overhead light inside the lift. He was taller than she was by a good four inches. And he had a scar on his face as well. It ran like a chalk mark from the corner of his eye right down his cheek and she knew what it was a razor slash -but not how he'd got it. So she said, "What's that, then?" with a nod at his face. He glanced at Daniel, who was looking up at him the way he always looked at black men: with that face so shiny so open so wanting, that face that revealed what'd gone missing in his life since the night his mum had taken on Roger Edwards one last time. The cop said, "A reminder, this is." "Of what?" "How stupid one bloke can be when he thinks he's cool." The lift jerked to a stop. She made no comment. The cop was closest to the door, so he got out first when it groaned open. But he made a point of holding the door back like it was going to slide shut and smack either Yasmin or her son ... fat lot he knew about the flaming lift. He stepped to one side, and she swept past him, saying, "Mind those bags, Dan. Don't drop the wigs, you'll never get the filth out." She admitted them into the flat and switched on one of the lamps in what passed for the sitting room. She said to her son, "Mind you fill the tub. Be easier with the shampoo this time round." "Right, Mum," Daniel said. He shot a shy look at the cop a look that so clearly said This is our gaff, what you think of it, man? that Yasmin ached for him, physically ached, and that ache made her angry because it told her once again just what she and Daniel had lost. She said, "Get on with it then," to her son and to the cop, "What you want, man? Who'd you say you were?" Dan said, "Winston Nkata, Mum." She said, "Told you what to do, d'n't I, Dan?" He grinned, with those big white teeth the teeth already of the man he'd become far sooner than she wanted him to shining in a face that was lighter than her own, a mixture of the colours of her skin and Roger's. He disappeared into the bathroom, where he turned the bath taps on, setting the water to roaring in a way that announced he was doing his job smartly, just like Mum'd told him to do. Winston Nkata stayed near to the door, and Yasmin found that this irritated her more than if he'd sauntered through the rooms of the flat -four rooms only so it wouldn't have taken him more than a minute even if he was studying what he saw in every one of those rooms inspecting every piece of her property. She said, "What's this about, then?" He said, "Mind if I look round?" "Why? I'm not holding nothing. You got a warrant? And I checked in like I always check in with Sharon Todd last week. If she's told you different if that bitch's told prison service anything different .. ." Yasmin could feel the scare creeping up her arms as she realised yet again the amount of power her parole officer had over what went for her freedom. She said, "She'd gone to see her GP. Least, that's what I was told, wasn't I? Had some sort of attack in the office, she did, and they told her to have it checked out straightaway. So when I got there .. ." She drew a breath to slow herself down. And she was angry angry at the fear that she felt and the fact that this man with his razor-scarred face had brought fear with him into her house. This copper held every card in the deck, and both of them knew it. She said with a shrug, "Look round, then. Whatever you want, you'll not find it here." He engaged her eyes for a long clear time, and she refused to look away because to look away would tell him he'd squashed her beneath his thumb like a flea. So she stood where she was by the passage to the kitchen while the water roared in the bathroom and Daniel saw to the wigs that needed washing. The cop said, "Cheers," with a nod that she was meant to believe was shy and polite. He went first to her bedroom and flipped on the light. She could see him move to the paint-chipped clothes cupboard, and he opened it, but he didn't empty the pockets of any of the garments inside, although he fingered several pairs of trousers. He didn't pull out the drawers in the chest, either. But he studied the top of it particularly one hair brush and the blond hairs caught up in its bristles, particularly the dish of beads that she used when she wanted a change on the ends of her plaits. He took the most time with the photograph of Roger, twin to the one that she had in the sitting room, triplet to the one that stood in the other bedroom on the table next to Daniel's small bed, quadruplet to the one that hung on the kitchen wall above the table. Roger Edwards, aged twenty-seven when the snap had been taken, one month arrived from New South Wales, and two days fresh from Yasmin's bed. The cop came out of her bedroom, nodded at her politely, and went into Daniel's where the music was the same: clothes cupboard, top of the chest, photo of Roger. He went from there to the bathroom, where Daniel started chatting to him straightaway, saying, "This is my reg'lar job, these wigs. Mum p'rvides them for ladies what have cancer, see? When they take their med'cine, their hair falls out mostly. Mum gives them hair. She does their faces as well." "Gives them beards, does she?" the cop asked. Daniel laughed. "Not with hair, man! She does them with make-up. Dead good she is at it, Mum is. I c'n show you a ' "Dan!" Yasmin barked. "Mind you've a job to do." She saw her son duck back to the bath tub. The cop came out of the bathroom, gave her another nod, and went into the kitchen. There a door led onto a tiny balcony where she dried their clothes, and he opened this door, peered outside, then closed it carefully and ran his hand a large hand, large like the rest of him -along the jamb like someone looking for splinters. He opened no cupboards or drawers. He did nothing else, in fact, except stand at the table and look, at that same photograph that he'd been looking at in every room. He said, "Who's this bloke, then?" "Dan's dad. My husband. He's dead." "Sorry." "No need to be sorry," she said. "I killed him. But I 'spect you know that already. I 'spect that's why you're here, right? Some Aussie with a habit for henry got found dead with a knife in his neck and you lot ran the specifics through your computers and Yasmin Edwards' name popped up like toast." "I didn't know that," Winston Nkata said. "Sorry all the same." He sounded .. . what? She couldn't put a name to it, just as she couldn't put the name she wanted to put to the expression in his eyes. And she felt the bubbling of rage grow in her, which was something that she couldn't think through and she could never explain. It was the rage she'd learned to feel young and always always at the hands of a man: blokes she met and thought well of for a day or a week or a month till who they were showed through what they pretended to be. She snapped, "What you want, then? Why're you messing with me? Why're you outside chatting to my son like you were in' crested in something he got to tell you? "F you think I done something, then you speak proper and you speak now or you get your bum out if here. Hear me? Because if you don't ' He said, "Katja Wolff," and that stopped her. What the hell did he want with Katja? He said, "Probation service list this as her address. That right?" "We got approval," Yasmin said. "I'm out five years. "S no mark against me. We got approval." "They got her working at a laundry up Kennington High Street," Winston Nkata said. "Stopped there first to have a word with her, but she'd not been in all day. Called in ill, they said. "Flu. So I came here." Alarms rang in Yasmin's head, but she made sure the sound of them didn't play on her face. She said, "So she's gone off to the doctor." "All day?" "NHS," she replied, with a shrug. He said as politely as he'd so far said everything else to her, "Fourth time she's phoned in, they tell me at the laundry, Missus Edwards. Fourth time in twelve weeks. Not happy, that lot in Kennington High Street. They spoke to her probation officer today." Alarm bells were changing to full blown sirens. The frights were charging up Yasmin's spine. But she knew how coppers lied to you when they wanted to rattle you into saying something they could twist like a rag, and harshly she reminded herself of that fact, saying inwardly, Bitch, don't you lose it now. She said, "I don't know nothing about any of that. Katja lives here, right, but she goes her own way. I got no ugh on my mind with Daniel, don't I?" He looked in the direction of her bedroom, where the full-size bed and the hairbrush on the chest and the clothes in the cupboard told a different story. And she wanted to scream, Yeah! And wha' about it, Charlie? You ever been inside? You ever known for five minutes what's it like to think that f r a stretch of time that feels like forever you'll have exactly no one in your life? Not a friend, not a mate, not a lover, not a partner? You know what that's like? But she said nothing. She merely met his eyes with defiance. And for five long seconds that felt like fifty, the only sound in the flat came from the bathroom where Dan started singing some pop song as he scrubbed the wigs. Then that sound was interrupted by another. A key scraped into the lock. The door swung open. And Katja was with them. Lynley made Chelsea his final stop of the day. After leaving Richard Davies with his card and with instructions to phone should he hear from Katja Wolff or have any further information to impart, he negotiated the congestion round South Kensington station and cruised down Sloane Street where the street lamps glowed on an up market neighbourhood of restaurants, shops, and houses and the autumn leaves patterned the pavements in bronze. As he drove, he thought about connections and coincidence and whether the presence of the former obviated the possibility of the latter. It seemed very likely. People were often in the wrong place at the wrong time, but rarely were they at the wrong place, at the wrong time, and with the intention of calling on someone who figured in a violent crime from their past. That sort of coincidence bore diligent scrutiny. He grabbed the first parking space he found in the relative vicinity of the St. James house, a tall umber brick building on the corner of Lordship Place and Cheyne Row. From the Bentley's boot, he took the computer he'd removed from Eugenie Davies' office. He heard a dog's immediate barking when he rang the bell. It came from the left that would be from St. James's study, where Lynley could see through a window that a light was burning and it approached the door with the enthusiasm of a canine doing the job properly. A woman's voice said, "Good grief, that's enough, Peach," to the dog who, in best dachshund fashion, completely ignored her. A bolt slid back, the outside light above the door flicked on, and the door itself swung open. "Tommy! Hullo. What a treat!" It was Deborah St. James who'd answered the bell, and she stood with the long-haired dachshund in her arms, a squirming barking bunch of brandy coloured fur who wanted nothing better than to sniff Lynley's leg, hands, or face to see if he met with her canine approval. "Peach!" Deborah remonstrated. "You know very well who this is. Stop it." She stepped back from the door, saying, "Come in, Tommy. Helen's already gone home, I'm afraid. She was tired, she said. Round four, this was. Simon accused her of keeping late nights to avoid compiling data on whatever it is they're doing1 can never keep it straight but she swore it was because you'd had her up till dawn listening to all four parts of The Ring. Except I can't remember if there are four parts. Never mind. What have you brought us?" Once the door was closed behind them, she put the dog on the floor. Peach gained a good whiff of Lynley's trousers, registered his scent, took a step backwards, and wagged her tail in greeting. "Thank you," he told the dachshund solemnly. She trotted into the study where a gas fire burned and a lamp was lit on St. James's desk. There, a number of printed pages were scattered, some of them bearing black and white photographs and some of them bearing only script. Deborah led Lynley into the room, saying, "Do put that thing down somewhere, Tommy. It looks heavy." Lynley chose a coffee table that stood in front of a sofa facing the fireplace. Peach came to investigate the computer before returning to a basket that exposed her to the best warmth of the fire. There, she curled herself into a ball, sighed happily, and watched the proceedings in a dignified head-on-paws position from which she blinked drowsily from time to time. "You must be wanting Simon," Deborah said. "He's just upstairs. Let me fetch him for you." "In a moment." Lynley said the words without thinking, and so quickly on the heels of her own that Deborah brought herself up short, smiled at him quizzically, and shoved a portion of her heavy hair behind one ear. She said, "All right," and walked to an old drinks trolley by the window. She was a tallish woman, lightly freckled across the bridge of her nose, not thin like a model, not stout, but well-shaped and completely female. She wore black jeans and a sweater that was the colour of green olives and made an attractive contrast with her coppery hair. He saw that the room was stacked along the walls and the bookshelves at floor level with dozens of mounted and framed photographs. Some of them were dressed in bubble wrap, which reminded him of Deborah's upcoming show in a gallery in Great Newport Street. She said, "Sherry? Whisky? We've got a new bottle of Lagavulin that Simon's telling me is nothing short of potable heaven." "Simon's not given to hyperbole." "Like the fine man of science that he is." "It must be good then. I'll have the whisky. You're working on the show?" "It's nearly ready. I'm at the catalogue stage." Handing over the whisky, she nodded to her husband's desk and said, "I've been going over the proofs. The pictures they've selected are fine, but they've edited out some of my timeless prose She grinned; her nose wrinkled as it always did, making her look much younger than her twenty-six years 'and I'm finding that I don't like that much. Look at me. My fifteen minutes arrive and straightaway I become the great artiste." He smiled. "That's unlikely." "Which part?" "The part about fifteen minutes." "You're very quick this evening." "I speak only the truth." She smiled at him fondly, then turned and poured herself a glass of sherry. She took it up, held it out, and said, "Here's to ... Hmm ... I don't know. What shall we drink to?" Which was how Lynley knew that Helen had been as good as her word, not telling Deborah about the coming baby. He was relieved at this. At the same time he was ill-at-ease. Deborah would have to know sometime, and he knew that he had to be the person to tell her. He wanted to do so now, but he couldn't to think of a place to begin, apart from saying outright, Let's drink to Helen. Let's drink to the baby my wife and I have made. Which was, of course, completely impossible. He said instead, "Let's drink to the sale of every one of your pictures next month. On opening night, to members of the royal family who will summarily demonstrate they've a taste for something beyond horses and blood sports." "You never did get over your first fox hunt, did you?" ' "The unspeakable in pursuit." "Such a traitor to your class." "I like to think it's what makes me interesting." Deborah laughed, said, "Cheers, then," and took a sip of sherry. For his part, Lynley took a deep gulp of the Lagavulin and considered everything that was going unsaid between them. What a thing it was to come face to face with one's cowardice and indecision, he thought. He said, "What will you do after the show is mounted? Have you another project in mind?" Deborah looked round at the photographs piled in their serried ranks and considered the question, head cocked and eyes thoughtful. "Bit frightening, that is," she admitted frankly. "I've been working on this since January. Eleven months now. And I suppose what I'd like to do if the gods allow it.. ." Her head tilted upwards to indicate not only the heavens but her husband who'd probably be given his say in the matter. "I'd like to do something foreign, I think. Portraits still, I do love portraits. But foreign faces this time. Not foreign-in-London faces because obviously I could find hundreds of thousands of those but they've been Britished, haven't they, even if they don't think so themselves. So what I'd like is something quite different. Africa? India? Turkey? Russia? I don't quite know." "But portraits all the same?" "People don't hide from the camera when the picture's not for their own use. That's what I like about it: the openness, the candour with which they gaze at the lens. It's rather addictive, looking at all those faces being real for once." She took another swallow of sherry and said, "But you can't have come to talk about my pictures." He took the opportunity for escape, even as he loathed himself for doing so. He said, "Is Simon in the lab?" "Shall I fetch him for you?" "I'll just go up, if that's all right." She said that it was, of course it was, he knew the way. And she crossed back to the desk where she'd been working, set down her glass and came back to him. He finished his whisky, thinking she meant to take his own glass, but she squeezed his arm and kissed him on the cheek. "Lovely to see you. D'you need help with that computer?" "I can manage," he said. And he did just that, not feeling particularly proud of himself for accepting the escape route she offered, but telling himself that there was work to be done and work came first, which was certainly a fact that Deborah St. James understood. Her husband was on the fourth floor of the house, where he had a work room that had long been called his laboratory, and Deborah had a darkroom adjacent to it. Lynley climbed to this floor, pausing at the top of the stairs to say, "Simon? Are you in the middle of something?" before he walked across the landing to the open door. Simon St. James was at his own computer, where he appeared to be studying a complicated structure that resembled a three dimensional graph. When he tapped a few keys, the graphic altered. When he tapped a few more, it revolved on its side. He murmured, "That's damn curious," and then turned to the door. "Tommy. I thought I heard someone come in a few minutes ago." "Deb offered me a glass of your Lagavulin. She was seeking confirmation as to its quality." "And?" "Pretty damn good. May I .. . ?" He nodded down at the computer. St. James said, "Sorry. Here. Let me move .. . Well, something can be moved, I think." He rolled his chair back from his computer table and hit the side of his leg brace at the knee with a metal ruler when it didn't adjust properly as he rose. He said, "I've been having the most blasted trouble with this thing. It's worse than arthritis. As soon as the rain starts, the knee hinge doesn't want to work properly. It's time for an overhaul. That or a visit to Oz." He spoke with an utter lack of concern that Lynley knew he felt but could not feel himself. Whenever St. James had taken a step in Lynley's line of vision in the last thirteen years, it had required every ounce of control he had not to avert his eyes in abject shame for having wreaked such physical devastation on his friend. St. James cleared a space on the worktable nearest to the door by stacking up papers and manila folders and moving several scientific journals to one side. He said casually, "Is Helen all right? She was looking rather pale when she left this afternoon. All day, in fact, now that I think of it." "She was fine this morning," Lynley said, and he told himself that the statement comprised the approximate if not the literal truth. She was fine. Morning sickness did not constitute illness in the usual sense. "Bit tired, I expect. We were out late at Web But that wasn't, he recalled, the story his wife had told Deborah and Simon earlier, was it? Blast Helen, he thought, for being so creative when it came to spinning tales. "No. Sorry. That was the other night, wasn't it. Christ. I can't keep anything straight. Anyway, she's fine. I expect it was a late night catching up with her." "Right. Well. Yes," St. James said, but his examination of Lynley was rather too lengthy for Lynley's comfort. In the small silence that ensued, rain began to fall outside. It hit the window like timpani in miniature, and it was accompanied by a sudden gust of wind that rattled the casement like an unspoken accusation. St. James said, "What've you brought me?" with a nod at the computer. "Some detective work." "That's your bailiwick, isn't it?" "This requires a more delicate touch." St. James hadn't known Lynley for more than twenty years to find himself suddenly incapable of reading between the lines. He said, "Are we on thin ice, Tommy?" Lynley said honestly, "A singular pronoun is all that's required. You're clean. If you'll help me, that is." "That's remarkably reassuring," St. James said dryly. "Why do I picture myself in an unpleasant future scenario, sitting in the dock or standing in the witness box, but in either case sweating like a fat man in Miami?" "That's your natural sense of fair play among men, a quality I deeply admire in you, by the way, if I've not mentioned the fact before now. It's also, however, one of the first things that gets tossed out of the window after a few years dealing with the criminal element." "This is from a case, then?" St. James said. "You didn't hear that from me." St. James fingered his upper lip thoughtfully as he gazed at the computer. He would know what Lynley ought to be doing with the piece of machinery. But as to why he wasn't doing it ... That was something he'd be better off not asking. He finally drew a breath and let it out, giving a shake of his head that indicated it was against his better judgement to say, "What do you need?" "All internet activity. Her use of e-mail particularly." "Her?" "Yes. Her. She may have received mail in the past from an internet Lothario, who calls himself Tongue Man ' "Good God." ' but there was nothing on the machine from him when we logged onto it in her office." Lynley went on to tell St. James Eugenie Davies' password, which the other man jotted down on a piece of yellow legal paper that he ripped from a pad on the worktable. "Am I looking for anything besides Tongue Man "You're looking for all activity, Simon. E-mail in, e-mail out. Surfing the net. Whatever she's done once she's logged on. That's possible, isn't it?" "Most of the time, yes. But I don't have to tell you how much more quickly an expert from the Yard could manage this for you, not to mention an order from some legal authority should you need to strong-arm the internet provider." "Right. I know that." "Which leads me to conclude that you suspect there's something here He placed his hand on the machine 'that puts someone in a difficult position, someone you'd rather not see get into a difficult position. Is that right?" Lynley said steadily, "Yes. That's right." "It's not you, I hope." "Great Scot. No." St. James nodded. "I'm glad of that, then." He looked momentarily uncomfortable and tried to hide the discomfort by lowering his head and rubbing the back of his neck. "So things are well with you and Helen, then," he settled on saying. Lynley saw his line of reasoning. A mysterious her, a computer in Lynley's possession, an unnamed someone getting into difficulty should his e-mail address show up on Eugenie Davies' computer... It added up to an illicit something, and St. James's longstanding relationship with Lynley's wife after all, he'd known Helen since she was eighteen -would make him more protective of her than one would necessarily expect of someone's employer. Lynley hastened to say, "Simon, it's nothing to do with Helen. Nor with me. You have my word on that. So will you do this for me?" "You're going to owe me, Tommy." "In spades. But I'm so far in debt to you at this point that I might as well sign over the land in Cornwall and have done with it." "That's a tempting offer," St. James smiled. "I've always fancied myself a country squire." "You'll do it, then?" "I expect I will. But without the land. God knows we don't want to set your ancestors spinning in their graves." DC Winston Nkata knew the woman was Katja Wolff before she opened her mouth, but put to the rack he wouldn't have been able to tell anyone exactly how he knew. She had a key to the flat, true, so there was that to identify her since this flat in the Doddington Grove Estate had been listed as her address when he'd tracked down her probation officer at DI Lynley's request a short time earlier. But it was more than the key unlocking the door that told him whom he was looking at. There was the way she carried herself, like someone wary of every potential encounter, and there was also her expression, a perfect blank, the sort of expression a lag wore inside so as not to draw attention to herself. She stopped right inside the door and her glance went from Yasmin Edwards to Nkata and back to Yasmin Edwards, where it remained. She said, "Am I interrupting you, Yas?" in a husky voice that bore less of the German accent than Nkata had expected. But, she'd been more than twenty years in the country at this point. And she hadn't been surrounded by her fellow Germans. Yasmin said, "This is the Bill, this is. Detective Constable. He's called Nkata," and Katja Wolff s body went on the alert: a subtle, tensing awareness that someone not born into the land of gang activity like Winston Nakata might not have noticed. Katja removed her coat cherry red and the close-fitting grey hat with its matching band of the coat's bright colour. Beneath, she had on a sky blue pullover, looking like cashmere but worn to a paper like thinness at the elbows, and pale grey trousers of a slick material threaded through with silver when she moved in the light. She said to Yasmin, "Where's Dan?" Yasmin indicated the bathroom with her head. "Doing wigs." "And this bloke?" She tilted her chin at Nkata. He took the reins while he had the chance, saying, "You're Katja Wolff?" She didn't reply. Instead she walked over to the bathroom and said hello to Yasmin's son, who appeared to be up to his elbows in bubbles. The boy looked over his shoulder at her, then into the sitting room, where he managed to lock eyes with Nkata for a moment. But he said nothing. Katja closed the bathroom door on him and strode to the old three piece suite that constituted the sitting room furniture. She sat on the sofa, opened a packet of Dunhills that lay on the table next to it, and took out a cigarette, which she lit. She picked up the television remote and was about to punch the set on when Yasmin said her name: not in supplication but in warning, it sounded to Nkata. At that, Winston found that he wanted to study Yasmin Edwards because he wanted to understand: her, the situation here in Kennington, her son, the relationship between the two women. He'd got beyond the fact that she was beautiful. He was still sorting through her anger, though, as well as through the fears she was doing her best to hide. He wanted to say, "You're all right here, girl," but he recognised the foolishness of doing so. He said to Katja Wolff, "Laundry up on Kennington High Street says you didn't show up to work today." She said, "I was ill this morning, all day in fact. I've just been to the chemist. There is no law broken in that, I believe," and she drew in on the cigarette and examined him. Nkata saw Yasmin glance between them. She clasped her hands in front of her, just at the level of her sex as if she wished to hide it. He said, "Go to the chemist by motor, then?" "Yes. What about it?" "Got your own motor, have you?" Katja said, "Why? Have you come to request that I drive you somewhere?" Her English was nearly perfect, remarkable really, as impressive as the woman herself. "Got a car, Miss Wolff?" he repeated patiently. "No. They don't generally provide parolees with modes of transport when they release them. It's a pity, I think. Especially for those who serve time for armed robbery. How bleak their future must look to them, knowing they'll have to escape from the scenes of their future crimes on foot. While for someone like me .. . ?" She tapped her cigarette against a ceramic ashtray that was shaped, seasonally, like a pumpkin. "A car is quite inessential for working in a laundry. One only needs a high tolerance for both endless boredom and insufferable heat." "So it's not your car, then?" Yasmin crossed the room as Nkata completed the question. She joined Katja on the sofa and neatly rearranged a few magazines and tabloids on the iron-legged coffee table in front of it. Having done this, she placed a hand on Katja's knee. She looked at Nkata across the line she'd drawn as clearly as if she'd wielded chalk on the carpet squares. She said, "What'd you want with us, man? Time to spit it out or time to leave. "Got a car yourself?" Nkata asked her. "f I do?" "Like to see it, I would." Katja said, "Why? Who is it you've come to speak to, Constable?" "We'll get to that soon enough, I expect," Nkata said. "Where's the car?" The two women were motionless for a moment during which a resumption of water roaring into the bathtub told everyone that Daniel was taking his mother's wigs through a manual rinse cycle. Katja was the one to break the silence, and she did it with the confidence of a woman who'd spent two decades educating herself as to her rights with regard to the police. "Have you a warrant? For anything, by the way?" "Didn't think I'd need one, conversation being what's on my mind." "Conversation about Yasmin's car?" "Missus Edwards' car. Ah. Right. Where is it?" Nkata tried not to look smug. The German woman flushed anyway, perhaps realising that her own dislike and distrust of Nkata had caused her to trip. "What's this about, man?" Yasmin snapped, but her voice was higher now and anxiety was tightening her hold on Katja's knee. "You're wanting a warrant if you mean to go through my car, hear me?" Nkata said, "I don't need to go through it, do I, Missus Edwards. But I'll have a look at it all the same." The women exchanged a glance after which Katja rose and went into the kitchen. There, cupboards opened and closed, a kettle clanged onto the cooker, and a burner hissed. For her part, Yasmin waited for a moment as if for a sign from the kitchen of something other than tea being made. When she didn't receive one, she got to her feet and snatched a key from a hook to the right of the flat's front door. She said, "Come on, then," to Nkata and, coat less despite the weather, she led him outside. Katja Wolff remained behind. Yasmin took lengthy strides towards the lift, as if she didn't care one way or another if the detective was following her. When she moved, her plaits so long that they reached her shoulder blades made a music that was both hypnotic and soothing, and Nkata realised that he couldn't account for the effect that that music had on him. He felt the reaction in his throat first, then behind his eyes, then in his chest. He shook it away and looked down at the car park, then over at what appeared to be allotments across the street, then in the direction of Manor Place, where he could glimpse the first of a row of derelict buildings that expressed what years of government indifference and urban decay had done to the neighbourhood. In the lift, he said, "D you grow up round here?" Yasmin stared him down in silence so he finally moved his gaze to the words eat me till I scream that someone had painted in nail varnish on the lift wall in line with Yasmin's right shoulder. The graffito brought his mother immediately to Nkata's mind: a female vigilante who would no more allow graffiti to foul her landscape than would she permit a profanity uttered within her hearing. Alice Nkata would have been so quickly inside that lift with the varnish remover that the imperative wouldn't have had a chance even to dry before she had obliterated it. Thinking of this and his dignified mother and how she'd managed to maintain her dignity in a society that saw a black woman first and the woman herself only second and if she was lucky that day, Nkata smiled fondly. Yasmin said, "Like to have women under your thumb, do you, man? That why you joined the Bill, was it?" He wanted to tell her that she shouldn't sneer, not because the expression distorted her face and stretched the scar on her lip so that it seemed to bloom, but because when she sneered, she looked frightened. And fear was a woman's enemy on the streets. He said, "Sorry. Thinking of my mum." "Your mum." She rolled her eyes. "You telling me next I remind you if her, yeah?" Nkata laughed outright at the thought of the comparison. He said, "Not at all, girl." And he chuckled more. Her eyes narrowed. The lift door creaked open. She stalked outside. Across a strip of dying lawn, the car park held a small array of cars that spoke of the general economic status of the people in the Doddington Grove estate. Yasmin Edwards took Nkata to a Fiesta with a rear bumper that clung to the vehicle like an inebriate to a lamppost. The car had once been red but the colour had long ago oxidized so it was mostly rust. Nkata walked round it carefully. The front right headlamp had a jagged crack in it but apart from the rear bumper, that was the extent of the damage. He squatted at the front of the Fiesta and peered beneath it, using a pocket torch to she'd some light on its undercarriage. He did the same thing at the back of the vehicle, taking his time. Yasmin Edwards stood by in silence, her arms wrapped round her against the chill, her summertime top meagre protection against the wind that was blowing and the rain that had begun to fall. Nkata straightened, his inspection finished. He said, "When'd that headlamp get smashed?" "What headlamp?" She went to the front of the car and examined it herself. "I don't know," she said, and for the first time since learning who and what Nkata was, she did not sound combative as she ran her fingers across the uneven crack in the glass. "Lights still work proper, so I didn't notice." She was shivering now, but it seemed more likely with the cold than with concern. Nkata removed his overcoat, saying, "Here," and handing it over. She took it. Nakata waited till she had slid her arms into his coat, till she had snugly wrapped it round her, till he saw what she looked like with the collar raised and expressing a curve against her dark skin. Then he said, "You both drive this car, Missus Edwards? Right that, isn't it? Both if you drive it? You and Katja Wolff?" And the coat was off and thrust back at him instantly, almost before he finished the question. If there had been a moment of anything more than hostility between them, he'd just managed to shatter it. Yasmin looked up to the flat where Katja Wolff was making tea. She returned her glance to Nkata and said evenly, arms encircling her body once more, "That all you want with us, man?" He said, "No. Where were you last night, Missus Edwards?" She said, "Here. Where else would I be? I got a boy needs his mum, I expect you noticed." "Miss Wolff here as well?" She said, "Yeah. Tha's right. Katja was here." But there was an undercurrent in the way she made the statement that suggested the facts might prove otherwise. Something always alters in a person when he lies. Nkata had been told that a hundred times. Listen to the timbre of the voice, he'd been lectured. Watch for changes in the pupils of the eyes. Look for the head's movement, the shoulders either relaxing or tensing, the muscles of the throat constricting. Look for something anything that wasn't there before, and that something will tell you exactly where the speaker stands in relation to the truth. He said, "I'll need another word," and he nodded upwards. "I've given you words." "Yeah. I know." He headed back to the lift and they went through the exercise they'd gone through before. But the silence between them felt charged to Nkata, and charged with something more than a man to woman charge, more than copper to suspect, more than former lag to potential screw. "She was here," Yasmin Edwards said. "But you don't believe me 'cause you can't believe me. "Cause if you sussed where Katja was living then you sussed the rest and you know I did time and lags and liars are one 'n the same when it comes to the filth. I'n't that right, man?" He'd reached the door to her flat. She slid in front of it, blocking his way. She said, "You ask her what she did last night. You ask her where she was. She tell you she was here. An' just to make sure I can't mess with your process, I'll keep myself out here while you ask her." Nkata said, "Suit yourself, but put this round you if you mean to stay outside," and he himself put the coat round her shoulders this time, drawing the collar up to protect her neck from the wind. She flinched. He wanted to say, "How'd you get this way, woman," but instead he ducked back inside the flat to have his confrontation with Katja Wolff. Chapter Ten "There were letters, Helen." Lynley was standing at the cheval mirror in their bedroom, gloomily attempting to make a choice among three ties that dangled limply from his fingers. "Barbara found them in a chest of drawers, just like love letters, all of them together with envelopes included. Everything was in place except the traditional blue ribbon tying them up." "Perhaps there's an innocent explanation." "What the hell was the man even thinking?" Lynley went on as if his wife hadn't spoken. "The mother of a murdered child. The victim of a crime. You don't find anyone more vulnerable than that, and when you do, you put distance between yourself and her. You don't seduce her." "If that's what happened, Tommy." Lynley's wife watched him from the bed. "What else could it have been? "Wait for me, Eugenie. I'm coming for you." That doesn't sound to me like your average bread-and-butter letter straight out of Mrs. Beeton." "I don't think Mrs. Beeton advised housewives on their letter writing, darling." "You know what I mean." Helen rolled onto her side, took his pillow, and cradled it her stomach. She said, "Lord," in a hollow tone that he couldn't ignore. "Bad this morning?" he asked. "Awful. I've never felt like this in my life. When will it progress to the rosy glow of a woman fulfilled? And why are pregnant women in novels always described as glowing when in reality they'd have faces like paste and stomachs at war with the rest of their bodies?" "Hmm." Lynley considered her question. "I don't actually know. Is it a conspiracy to keep the species propagating? I wish I could bear this for you, darling." She laughed weakly. "You've always been such a terrible liar." There was truth in that and because of it, he held up the three ties for her inspection. "I was thinking about the dark blue with the ducks. What do you say?" "Very appropriate for fostering in suspects the false belief that you'll be gentle with them." "Just what I thought." He returned to the mirror, draping the other two ties round one of the bed posts on his way. She said, "Did you tell DCI Leach about the letters?" "No." "What did you do with them?" Their glances met in the mirror and she read his reply on his face. "You took them? Tommy .. ." "I know. But consider the alternative: to hand them over as evidence or to leave them there for someone else who might track down Webberly at the worst possible time and return them. To his home, for instance. With Frances standing there, just waiting for someone to deal her a death blow. Or even to the Yard, where it wouldn't do much for his career to have it made public that he'd involved himself with the victim of a crime. Or how about to a tabloid or two? They've such a profound love for the Met, after all." "Is that the only reason you took them? To protect Frances and Malcolm?" "What other reason is there?" "Perhaps the crime itself? They could be evidence." "You aren't suggesting Webberly was involved in some way, are you? He was in our presence the whole evening. As was Frances, who'd have far more reason to want to be rid of Eugenie Davies than would Webberly if it came down to it. Beyond that, the last of the letters was written over a decade ago. Eugenie Davies has been a closed book for Webberly for years. It was mad for him to have involved himself with her in the first place, but at least it ended before lives were shattered." Helen read him, as usual. "But you're not sure of that, are you, Tommy?" "I'm sure enough. So I don't see the letters' relevance to the present, to today." "Unless there's been recent contact between them." Which was, in part, why he'd taken Eugenie Davies' computer. Lynley was relying on gut instinct with regard to that, instinct which told him that his superior officer was a decent man who had a difficult life, a man who never sought to harm another human being, but who had submitted to temptation in a moment of weakness that he no doubt regretted to this day. "He's a good man," Lynley said into the mirror, more to himself than to his wife. She responded all the same. "As are you. And that might explain why he asked DCI Leach to allow you in on the case. You believe in his decency, so you'll protect him, without his having to ask you to do so." And that's the way it was playing out, Lynley thought morosely. Perhaps Barbara had been right. Hand the letters over as potential evidence; leave Malcolm Webberly to his fate. Across the room, Helen suddenly threw back the covers and dashed to the bathroom. The retching began, just beyond the open door. Lynley looked at himself in the mirror and tried to close his ears to the sound. Funny how one could talk oneself into believing just about anything if one was desperate enough. In a twist of thinking, Helen's morning sickness could become the result of a bad bit of chicken eaten yesterday on a lunchtime salad. Another twist, and she had 'flu, which was going round now anyway. Or perhaps it was a case of nerves. She was facing a challenge later in the day, and this was the way her body reacted to anxiety. Or pushed to an extreme of rationalisation, he could say that she was simply afraid. They hadn't been together long, had they, and she wasn't as easy being with him as he was being with her. There were, after all, differences between them: of experience, of education, and of age. And all that counted for something, didn't it, no matter how they tried to talk themselves into believing otherwise? The retching continued. He forced himself to deal with it in some reasonable way. He turned from the mirror and strode across to the bathroom. He flipped on the light, which in her haste Helen had not switched on. He found her draped round the toilet, her back heaving mightily as she gulped in air. He said, "Helen?" But he found he could not move from the doorway. Selfish bastard, he told himself as a prod to action. This is the woman you love. Go to her. Touch her hair. Wipe her face with a cool damp flannel. Do something. But he couldn't. He was frozen to one spot as if he'd inadvertently looked upon Medusa, fixed on the sight of his beautiful wife reduced to vomiting into the toilet bowl, her now daily ritual that celebrated the fact of their union. He said, "Helen?" and he waited for her to tell him that she was all right, that she needed nothing. He waited hopefully for her to send him on his way. She turned her face to him. He could see its damp sheen. And he knew that she was waiting for him to make some move in her direction that would underscore the love and concern that he felt for her. He made do with a question. "Can I get you something, Helen?" Her eyes held his. He saw the subtle change come over her as her dawning realisation that he would not go to her metamorphosed into hurt. She shook her head and turned away. Her fingers gripped the edges of the toilet. "I'm fine," she murmured. And he was happy to accept the lie. In Stamford Brook, the sound of a cup rattling in its saucer awakened Malcolm Webberly. He cracked open his eyes to see his wife setting a cup of morning tea on the scarred surface of the bedside table. The room was claustrophobically hot, the result of a poorly designed central heating system and Frances's refusal to have any windows open at night. She couldn't bear the sensation of night air on her face. She also couldn't sleep for thinking that someone might break into their house should so much as an inch's gap exist between a window and its sill. Webberly lifted his head from the pillow, then sank back down with a groan. It had been a rough night. He ached in every joint in his body, which was secondary to the ache in his heart. "I've brought you some nice Earl Grey," Frances said. "Milk and sugar. It's piping hot." She went to the window and opened the curtains. The limp light of late autumn filtered into the room. "All grey and nasty today, I'm afraid," she went on. "It looks like rain. There's to be a wind coming from the west later on. Well, November. What else can one expect?" Webberly elbowed his way upwards through the covers, becoming aware of the fact that he'd sweated through another set of pyjamas during the night. He took up the cup and saucer and looked down at the steaming liquid, its colour telling him that Frances hadn't let it steep, that it would taste like milky water. He hadn't been a morning tea drinker for years. Coffee was his beverage of choice. But tea was what Frances herself drank and it was easier to plug in the kettle and pour the boiling water over the tea bags than it was to go through the scooping, measuring, and pouring that resulted in a decent cup of what he preferred. It's all the same at the end of the day, he told himself. Getting caffeine into the body is the main point, boy. So drink up now and have at the morning. "I've made out the shopping list," Frances said. "It's by the door." He grunted an acknowledgment. She seemed to take this sound as a protest, saying anxiously, "Really, there's not much to get. Just the odd thing. Tissues, kitchen rolls, that sort of thing. We've still got all that food from the party. It shouldn't take long." "Fine, Fran," he said. "No problem. I'll stop on my way home from work." "If something comes up, you needn't ' "I'll stop on my way home." "Well, only if it's not too much trouble, dear." Not too much trouble? Webberly thought and he hated himself for the disloyalty he was showing even as he allowed himself to experience a momentary swelling of resentment towards his wife. Not too much trouble to see to everything and anything that involved an excursion into the world, Fran? Not too much trouble to shop for groceries, to drop by the chemist, to collect the dry cleaning, to have the car serviced, to see to the garden, to walk the dog, to ... Webberly forced himself to stop. He reminded himself that his wife wouldn't have chosen this illness, that she wasn't attempting to make his life a misery, that she was doing her best to cope and so was he, and coping with what was dished onto your plate was what life was all about. "It's no trouble, Fran," he told her as he sipped the tasteless drink. "Thanks for the tea." "I hope it's all right. Something special this morning. Something a bit different." "Good of you," he said. He knew why she'd done it. She'd brought him tea for the same reason that she would go downstairs as soon as he was out of bed and begin to cook him a sumptuous breakfast. It was the only way she could apologise to him for not managing to do what she'd claimed she would do a brief twenty-four hours earlier. Her plan to work in the garden had come to nothing. Even protected behind the walls that marked the boundaries of their property, she hadn't felt safe so she hadn't left the house. Perhaps she had tried: placing one hand on the doorknob I can manage this -cracking the door open yes, I can do this as well feeling the fresh air wash against her cheeks there's nothing to fear and even curling the fingers of one hand round the door jamb before panic claimed her. But that's as far as she'd got and he knew it because God forgive him for his own insanity he'd inspected her Wellingtons, the tines of the rake, the gardening gloves, and even the rubbish bags for evidence that she'd gone outside, done something, picked up a single leaf, made an inroad into her irrational fears. He swung out of bed, swilling down the rest of the tea. He could smell the sweat on his pyjamas and the feel of them was clammy against his skin. He felt weak, oddly off balance, as if he'd come through a long period of fever and was only now recovering from it. Frances said, "I'm going to make you a proper breakfast, Malcolm Webberly. None of this corn flakes nonsense today." "I need a shower," he said in reply. "Brilliant. That'll give me just enough time." She headed to the door. He said, "Fran," to stop her. And when she paused, "There's no need for all that." "No need?" Her head tilted to one side. She'd combed her red hair -dyed with the colour that she sent him to Boots once a month to fetch so that it would match their daughter's hair, which it never did and she wore her pink dressing gown precisely belted, with a perfect bow. "It's all right," he said. "You don't need to .. ." To what? Saying the words would take them somewhere neither of them wanted to go. Webberly settled on, "You don't need to coddle me. I can manage with corn flakes." She smiled. "Of course, you can manage with them, darling. But every once in a while, it's lovely to have a proper breakfast. You've got time, haven't you?" "There's a the dog to walk." "I'll walk him, Malcolm. But that was an announcement she could not make. Not after yesterday's proclamation about gardening. Two defeats in a row would be an injury that she wouldn't want to risk inflicting on herself. Webberly understood that. The hell of it was, he'd always understood it. So he was unsurprised when she said, "Let's see how the time goes, shall we? I expect there's enough. And if there's not, you can cut short Alfie's walk. Just down to the corner and back. He'll survive." She crossed the room, kissed him fondly and left. In less than a minute, he could hear her banging about in the kitchen. She started to sing. He plodded along the corridor to the bathroom. It smelled of mildew from grout round the tub that needed cleaning and a shower curtain that needed replacing, and Webberly shoved open the window fully and stood in front of it, breathing in the sodden morning air. It was the heavy, tubercular air of an approaching winter that promised to be long, cold, wet, and grey. He thought of Spain, of Italy, of Greece, of the countless sun-drenched environments round the world that he would never see. Roughly, he shook off the mental pictures of these places, turning from the window and shedding his pyjamas. He twisted the hot water tap in the tub till the steam rose like an optimist's hope, and when he'd added enough cold water to the mix to make it bearable, he stepped inside and began to work lather vigorously round his body. He thought of his daughter's reasonable question about insisting that Frances return to the psychiatrist. He asked himself what harm could it do, simply to make the suggestion to his wife. He hadn't mentioned her problem for the past two years. On the twenty-fifth anniversary of their marriage with retirement looming how unforgivable would it be to imply that the opportunity for a different life was fast approaching them and in order to have that different life, Frances might want to consider how best to address her problem? We'll want to do some travelling, Frannie, he could tell her. Think of seeing Spain again. Think of Italy. Think of Crete. Why, we could even sell up and move to the country as we once talked of doing. Her lips would form a smile as he spoke, but her eyes would show the incipient panic. "Why, Malcolm," she'd say and her fingers would clutch: the edge of her apron, the belt of her dressing gown, the cuff of her shirt. "Why, Malcolm," she'd say. Perhaps she'd make the attempt at that point, seeing that he was in earnest. But she'd make the attempt that she'd made two years ago, and it would doubtless end where that attempt had ended: with panic, tears, a phone call by strangers in the street to nine-nine-nine, paramedics and ambulance and police dispatched to Tesco's where she'd taken herself by taxi to prove she could do it, darling .. . and afterwards a hospital, a period of sedation, and reinforcement for every terror she felt. She'd forced herself out of the house to please him. It hadn't worked then. It wouldn't work now. "She has to want to get well," the psychiatrist had told him. "Without desire, there is no exigency. And the internal exigency that demands recovery cannot be manufactured." So it had been, year after year. The world went on while her world shrank. His world was joined inextricably to her world, and sometimes Webberly thought he would suffocate in its smallness. He rinsed himself long in the water. He washed his thinning hair. When he was done, he stepped out of the tub into the bone chill of the bathroom where the window still gaped, letting in a last few minutes of the morning air. Downstairs, he found that Frances had been as good as her word. A full breakfast was laid out on the table as he joined her in the kitchen, where the air was redolent with the scent of bacon and Alfie was sitting at the corner of the cooker, looking hopefully at the frying pan from which Frances was removing the rashers. The table, however, was laid only for one. "You aren't eating?" Webberly asked his wife. "I live to serve you." She gestured with the frying pan. "One word from you and the eggs go on. When you're ready for them. Any way you want them. Any way you want anything." "D'you mean that, Fran?" He pulled out his chair. "Scrambled, fried, or poached," she declared. "I'll even do them devilled for you, if you've a mind for that." "If I've a mind for it," he said. He didn't feel like eating, but he shoveled the food into his mouth. He chewed and swallowed without tasting much. Only the acidic tang of orange juice made the journey from his tongue to his brain. Frances chatted. What did he think about Randie's weight? She hated to talk to their daughter about it, but didn't he think she was getting just a bit too chunky for a girl her age? And what of this recent plan of hers to have a year in Turkey? Turkey, of all places. She was always coming up with a new plan, so of course one didn't want to get oneself in a dither over something that she might not even do, but a girl her age ... on her own ... in Turkey .. . ? It wasn't wise, it wasn't safe, it wasn't sensible, Malcolm. Last month she was talking about a year in Australia, which was bad enough ... all that distance without her family. But this? No. They had to talk her out of this. And wasn't Helen Lynley looking lovely the other night? She's one of those women who can wear anything. Naturally, it's the expense of the clothes that tells the tale. Buy French and you look like a ... well, just like a countess, Malcolm. And she can buy French, can't she? No one's watching to see who she buys from. Not like the poor old dowdy Queen, who's always dressed by some English upholsterer by the look of her. Clothes do so make a woman, don't they? Chat. Chat. Chat. It filled a silence that might otherwise be used for a conversation too painful to be endured. It simultaneously wore the guise of warmth and of closeness, offering a portrayal of the long married couple breaking their fast a deux. Webberly shoved his chair back abruptly. He scrubbed the paper napkin across his mouth. "Alfie," he commanded. "Come. Let's go." He grabbed the lead from the hook near the door, and the dog padded after him, through the sitting room and out of the front door. Alfie came to life as soon as paws hit pavement. His tail began to wag, and his ears perked up. He was all at once on the alert for his sworn enemies cats and as he and his master headed down the street, the Alsatian kept an eye out for anything potentially feline at which he could bark. He sat obediently as he always did when they came to Stamford Brook Road. Here, the traffic could be heavy depending upon the time of day, and even a zebra crossing didn't guarantee a driver's seeing a pedestrian. They crossed and made their way to the garden. The night's rain had made the place thoroughly sodden. The grass was heavily bent with moisture, tree limbs dripped, and the benches along the perimeter path were shining slickly with water. This didn't matter to Webberly. He didn't want to sit beneath the trees, and he had no interest in the lawn across which Alfie gambolled as soon as Webberly had him off the lead. Instead he took to the perimeter path. He walked determinedly, gravel crunching beneath his soles, but while his body was in the Stamford Brook neighbourhood in which he'd lived for more than twenty years, his mind was centred on Henley-on-Thames. He'd come this far into his day without thinking once of Eugenie. It seemed something of a miracle to him. She hadn't left his thoughts for an instant during the previous twenty-four hours. He hadn't heard from Eric Leach yet, and he hadn't seen Tommy Lynley at the Yard. He accepted the latter's request for DC Winston Nkata as a sign that progress was being made, but he wanted to know what that progress was because knowing something anything at this point was better than being left with nothing but images best forgotten from the past. Without that contact with his fellow officers, though, the images came to him. Unprotected by the claustrophobic confines of his house, by Frances's chatter, by the duties that faced him once he got to work, he was assailed by mental pictures, pictures so distant now as to be fragments only, pieces of a puzzle he'd not been able to complete. It was summer, sometime after the Regatta. He and Eugenie were rowing in a boat on the sluggish river. Hers had not been the first marriage that had not survived the horror of a violent death in the family. It would not be the last that cracked irreparably under the combined weight of investigation-and-trial and the powerful load of guilt attendant on losing a child to someone in whom trust had been mistakenly placed. But Webberly had felt more at the dissolution of this particular marriage. It was many months before he admitted why. After the trial, the tabloids had gone after her with the same rapacity that had driven their stories about Katja Wolff. Where Wolff had been the reincarnation of everyone from Mengele to Himmler, responsible in the eyes of the press for everything from the Holocaust to the Blitz, Eugenie had been the indifferent mother: she who worked outside the home, she who had employed an unskilled girl untutored in English and in the ways of the English to care for a badly disabled child. If Katja Wolff had been vilified in the press and deservedly so, considering her crime -Eugenie had been pilloried. She'd accepted this public scourging as her due. "I'm to blame," she'd said. "This is the least I deserve." She spoke with simple dignity, with neither hope nor desire of being contradicted. Indeed, she would not allow contradiction. "I just want it to end," she'd said. He saw her again, two years after the trial, quite by chance at Paddington Station. He was on his way to a conference in Exeter. She was coming into town, she said, for an engagement with someone she did not name. "Just coming in?" he'd said. "You've moved house, then? To the country? That's good for your boy, I expect." But no, they hadn't moved to the country. She'd just moved herself, alone. He'd said, "Oh. I'm sorry." She'd said, "Thank you, Inspector Webberly." He'd said, "Malcolm. Please, it's plain Malcolm." She'd said, "Plain Malcolm, then," and her smile was infinitely sad. He'd said impulsively and in a rush because it was mere minutes before his train left the station, "Would you give me your number, Eugenie? I'd like to check how you're doing now and then. As a friend. If that's all right with you." She'd written it on the newspaper he'd been carrying. She'd said, "Thank you for your kindness, Inspector." "Malcolm," he'd reminded her. Summer on the river had been twelve months later and not the first time he'd found an excuse to drive to Henley-on-Thames to check on Eugenie. She was lovely that day, quiet as always but with a sense of peace that he'd not witnessed in her before. He rowed the boat and she leaned back and rested on her side, not trailing her hand in the water in the way some women might have done, hoping for a seductive pose, but merely watching the river's surface as if its depths hid something she was waiting to see. Her face reflected brightness and shadow as they glided along beneath the trees. He was aware in a rush that he'd fallen in love with her. But they had those twelve months of chaste friendship between them: walks round town, drives in the country, lunches at pubs, the occasional dinner and the warmth of conversation, real conversation about who Eugenie Davies had been and how she'd come to be who she was. "I believed in God when I was young," she told him. "But I lost God along the way to adulthood. I've been a long time without Him now, and I'd like to get Him back if I can." "Even after what's happened?" "Because of what's happened. But I'm afraid he won't have me, Malcolm. My sins are too great." "You haven't sinned. You couldn't possibly sin." "You of all people can't believe that. Everyone sins." But Webberly couldn't see sin in her, no matter what she said about herself. He saw only perfection and ultimately what he himself wanted. But to speak of his feelings seemed a betrayal in every direction. He was married and the father of a child. She was fragile and vulnerable. And despite the time that had passed since her daughter's murder, he couldn't bring himself to take advantage of her grief. So he settled on saying, "Eugenie, do you know that I'm married?" She moved her gaze from the water to him. "I assumed that you were." "Why?" "Your kindness. No woman thinking straight would be foolish enough to let someone like you get away. Would you like to tell me about your wife and family?" "No." "Ah. What does that mean?" "Marriages end sometimes." "Sometimes they do." "Yours did." "Yes. My marriage ended." She moved her gaze back to the water. He continued to row and watched her face, feeling as if in a hundred years as a man long blind he would still be able to draw from memory every line and curve of it. They'd brought a picnic with them and when he saw the spot he wanted, Webberly bumped the boat into the bank. He said, "Wait. Stay there. Let me tie it up, Eugenie," and as he scrambled up the slippery little slope, he lost his footing and slid into the water, where he stood humiliated with the Thames lapping coolly round his thighs. The mooring rope draped over his hand, and the river ooze seeped into his shoes. Eugenie sat up straight, saying, "Heavens, Malcolm! Are you all right?" "I feel a perfect fool. It never happens this way in films." "But this way is better," Eugenie said. And before he could speak again, she scrambled from the boat and joined him in the water. "The mud he began in protest. "Feels exquisite," she finished. And she began to laugh. "You've blushed to the roots of your hair. Why?" "Because I want everything perfect," he admitted. She said, "Malcolm, everything is." He was flustered, wanting and not wanting, sure and unsure. He said nothing more. They clambered from the river onto the bank. He pulled the boat close and took from it the lunch they'd brought with them. They found a spot under a willow that they liked. It was when they sank to the ground that she spoke. "I'm ready, Malcolm, if you are," she said. Thus it began between them. "So the kid was given up for adoption." Barbara Havers concluded her recitation by flipping closed her tatty notebook and digging round in her lump of a shoulder bag for a packet of Juicy Fruit which she brought forth and generously offered round Eric Leach's Hampstead office. The DCI took a stick. Lynley and DC Nkata demurred. Havers folded one into her mouth and began to chew vigorously. Her substitute for the weed, Lynley thought. Again, he wondered idly when she'd give up smoking altogether. For his part, Leach played with the foil interior wrapper of the gum. He folded it into a miniature fan and placed it at the base of a photograph of his daughter. He'd apparently been on the phone to her when the Scotland Yard detectives arrived, and they'd come upon him at the end of a conversation in which he was wearily saying, "For God's sake, Esme, this is something you need to discuss with your mum... Of course she'll listen. She loves you .. . Now you're jumping the gun. No one's getting .. . Esme, listen to me .. . Yes. Right. Someday she ... So might I, but that will never mean we don't At which point, the girl had apparently hung up on him because he stood behind his desk with his mouth open on what he'd intended to say. He'd replaced the phone in its cradle with undue care and sighed heavily. Now, he went on. "That could be what's driving our killer, then. Or our killers. The adopted kid. Wolff didn't put herself in the club without assistance. Let's keep that in mind." The four of them continued their exchange of information. A hideous knot of traffic in Westminster had kept the Scotland Yard detectives from Leach's morning meeting with his team in the incident room, so the DCI took notes. At the conclusion of Havers' report on the Convent of the Immaculate Conception, Nkata said, "Could be the motive we're looking for, this. She wants that kid and no one's giving her any help to find... is it him or her, Barb?" As was largely his habit, he hadn't taken a seat in the office. Rather, he stood not far from the doorway, lounging against the wall with one broad shoulder resting next to a framed commendation that Leach had received from the commissioner. "It's him," Havers said. "But I don't think that's the case." "Why?" "According to Sister Cecilia, she gave him up for adoption straightaway. She could have kept him with her for nine months longer than that if she did time somewhere other than Holloway but she didn't want to. She didn't even request it and get denied. She just handed him over in the delivery room and never took a look at him." Lynley said, "She wouldn't have wanted to get attached to the infant, Havers. What would be the point, facing a twenty year sentence? It could be an indication of the strength of her maternal feelings for the baby. Had she not had him adopted, he would have spent his life in care." "But if she was looking for the kid, why not start with the convent?" Havers asked. "Sister Cecilia handled the adoption." "Could be she's not looking for him at all," Nkata pointed out. "Twenty years later? She might know the kid wouldn't likely want to meet his real mum and find out she's a yard bird. And that could be 'exactly why she did the job on Missus Davies in the first place. Maybe she's thinking she wouldn't've been a yard bird without Missus Davies. Live with that for twenty years and when you get out, you want to do something about settling the score." "I just don't buy that," Havers insisted. "Not with this bloke Wiley sitting out there in his bookshop, knowing every move Eugenie Davies made. Convenient, wouldn't you say, that he happened to come upon our victim and a mystery man having an argument on the very night she was killed? Who's to say it was an argument at all but just the opposite? And our Major Wiley took some nasty action as a result." "We need to track this kid down one way or another," Leach said. "Katja Wolffs kid. She might be on his trail and he'll need to be advised. It's messy, but there's no way round it. You handle that, Constable." Havers said, "Sir," in acquiescence, but she didn't look convinced about the value of the assignment. Winston Nkata said, "I say Katja Wolffs the right direction. There's something off with that bird." He went on to describe for the others the meeting he'd had with the German woman once he'd returned to Yasmin Edwards' flat on the previous evening. Asked for her whereabouts on the night in question, Katja Wolff had claimed to be at home with Yasmin and Daniel. Watching television, she'd said, although she couldn't name the programme and said they'd channel surfed all evening and she hadn't kept track where they'd touched down. What was the point of having a satellite dish and a remote if you weren't going to use both to entertain yourself? She'd lit a cigarette as they'd spoken, and from her demeanour it looked as if she hadn't a care in the world. She'd said, "What's this about, Constable?" in apparent innocence. But her glance flicked to the door before she answered the most important questions, and Nkata had known what that glance meant: She was hiding something from him and wondering if Yasmin Edwards had told a story similar to hers. "What did the Edwards woman claim?" Lynley asked. "That Wolff was there. Wouldn't say anything else about it, though." "Old lags," Eric Leach pointed out. "They're sure as hell not going to finger each other for anything, not on a first go-round with the local rozzers. You need to go after them, Constable. What else have you got?" Nkata told them of the cracked headlamp on Yasmin Edwards' Fiesta. "Claimed she didn't know how it happened or when," he said. "But Wolff has access. She was driving it yesterday." "Colour?" Lynley asked. "Red gone bad." "That's not helpful," Havers pointed out. "Any of the neighbours have either one of them leaving the flat the night in question?" Leach asked this as a uniformed female constable came into his office with a sheaf of papers that she handed over. He glanced at them, grunted his thanks, and said, "Where are we with the Audis, then?" "Still at it," she said. "Nearly two thousand in Brighton, sir." "Who would've thought that?" Leach muttered as the constable left them. "Whatever happened to buy British? He hung on to the papers but didn't refer to them, going back to his previous topic and saying to Nkata, "The neighbours? What about it?" "South of the river," Nkata said with a shrug. "No one willing to talk, even to me. Just one Bible basher who wanted to bang on 'bout women who live together in sin. Said the residents'd tried to get that baby killer -these're her words, not mine off the premises with no luck." "We've got some more digging to do out there, then," Leach noted. "See to it. Edwards might crack if you have a decent go. You said she has a boy, right? Bring him into the picture if you need to. Accessory to murder could get her arse in a sling, so point that out to her. In the meantime," he rooted through some paperwork on his desk and brought out a photograph, "Holloway couriered this over last night. It needs to get taken round Henley-on-Thames." He handed it to Lynley who saw by the line of typing beneath it that it was a photograph of Wolff. The picture wasn't flattering. She was ill-lit, looking haggard and unkempt. Looking, he thought, just like a convicted murderer. "If she did do the job on the Davies woman," Leach continued, 'she would have had to begin by tracking her down to Henley. If she did that, someone was bound to see her. Check it out." In the meantime, Leach concluded, they'd got a list of all phone calls made into and out of Eugenie Davies' cottage in the past three months. That list was being compared with the names in the dead woman's address book. The names and numbers in the address book were being matched to the calls on her answer machine. A few more hours and they should have some details as to who was last in contact with her. "And we've got a name for the Cell Net number," Leach informed them. "One Ian Staines." "That could be her brother," Lynley said. "Richard Davies mentioned that she had two brothers, one called Ian." Leach jotted this down. He said, "D'we know our assignments, then, lads and lasses?" as a sign their meeting was at an end. Havers and Lynley rose. Nkata disengaged from the wall. Leach stopped them before they left the office. He said, "Speak to Webberly, any of you?" It was a casual enough question, Lynley thought. But its air of nonchalance didn't feel genuine. "He wasn't in this morning when we left the Yard," Lynley said. "Give him my best when you see him," Leach said. "Tell him I'll be in touch very soon." "We will. When we see him." Out on the street and once Nkata had gone on his way, Havers said to Lynley, "In touch about what? That's what I want to know." "They're old friends." "Hmmph. What've you done with those letters?" "Nothing, as yet." "Are you still planning to .. ." Havers peered at him. "You are, aren't you? Damn it, Inspector, if you'd listen for a minute ' "I'm listening, Barbara." "Good. Hear this: I know you, and I know how you think. "Decent bloke, Webberly. He made a little mistake. But there's no sense letting one little mistake become a catastrophe." Except it has, Inspector. She's dead and those letters just might be why. We've got to face that. We've got to deal with it." "Are you arguing that letters more than ten years old would provoke someone to murder?" "Alone, no. I'm not saying that. But according to Wiley she was going to tell him something important, something he thought would change their relationship. So, what if she already told him? Or what if he already knew because he came across those letters? We have only his word that he doesn't know what she had to say." "Agreed," Lynley said. "But you can't be thinking she wanted to speak to him about Webberly. That's ancient history." "Not if they'd resumed their affair. Not if they'd never lost touch. Not if they'd been meeting in... say... pubs and hotels? That would have to be dealt with. And maybe it was. Only it was dealt with badly and not in the way our principals Mrs. Davies and Webberly thought it would be." "I don't see that happening," Lynley said. "And it's far too coincidental for my liking that Eugenie Davies would be killed so soon after Katja Wolff was released from prison." "You're jumping on that horse?" Havers scoffed. "It's a non-starter. Depend on it." "I'm not jumping on any horse at all," Lynley replied. "It's far too early to be doing that. And I suggest you employ the same hesitation with regard to Major Wiley. It gets us nowhere to fix our minds on one possibility and become blind to the others." "You're not doing that? You haven't decided those letters from Webberly are inconsequential, Inspector?" "What I've decided is to develop my opinions based on facts, Barbara. We haven't got a lot of them so far. Until we have, we can serve the cause of justice not to mention pursue the course of wisdom only by keeping our eyes open and our judgements suspended. Don't you agree?" Havers fumed. "Listen to yourself. Bloody hell. I hate it when you go all toffs-in-town-for-the-season on me." Lynley smiled. "Do you? Was I? I hope it doesn't provoke you to violence." "Just to smoking," Havers informed him. "Even worse," Lynley sighed. Gideon 8 OCTOBER Last night I dreamed of her, or of someone like her. But the time and the place were both out of joint because I was on the Eurostar and we were descending beneath the English Channel. It was like going down into a mine. Everyone was there: Dad, Raphael, my grandparents, and someone shadowy and faceless whom I recognised as my mother. And she was there as well: the German girl, looking much the way she looked in the newspaper photo. And yes, Sarah-Jane Beckett was there, with a picnic basket from which she pulled not a meal but a baby. She offered the baby round like a plate of sandwiches and everyone refused. One can't eat a baby, Granddad instructed her. Then it was dark outside the windows. Someone said, Oh yes, we're under the water now. And that's when it happened. The tunnel walls broke. The water came through. It wasn't black like the inside of the tunnel, though, but rather like the bottom of a riverbed where one might swim and look up through the water at the sun. And suddenly in that way dreams have of changing, we were no longer in a train at all. The carriage disappeared, and we were out of the water and on the shore of a lake. A picnic basket lay on a blanket, and I wanted to open it because I was famished. But I couldn't unfasten the basket's leather straps and although I asked for someone to open it for me, no one would because they didn't hear me. They couldn't hear me because they were all on their feet, pointing and crying out about a boat that was floating some distance from the shore. And I became aware suddenly of what they were crying: It was my sister's name. Someone said, She's been left in the boat! We must fetch her! But no one moved. Then the leather straps from the picnic basket were gone, as if they'd never been. Exultant, relieved, I flung the top open to get at the food, but there was no food inside. There was only the baby. And I somehow knew that the baby was my sister even though I couldn't see her face. She was covered head and shoulders by a veil, the sort you see on statues of the Virgin. I said in the dream, Sosy's here. She's right here. But no one on the shore would listen. Instead, they began to swim towards the boat, and I couldn't stop them no matter how I shouted. I picked the baby up from the basket to show them I was telling the truth. I cried out, She's here! Look! Sosy's right here! Come back! There's no one in the boat! But they kept swimming, one by one entering the water in a single line, and one by one disappearing beneath the surface of the lake. I was desperate to stop them. I thought that if they could see her face, if I could hold her high enough above my shoulders, they would believe me and come back. So I tore at the veil round my sister's face. But I found another veil beneath it, Dr. Rose. And under that another. And under that another. I tore at them till I was weeping and frantic and no one was left on the shore but me. Even Sonia was gone. Then I turned to the picnic basket again to find it filled not with food but with dozens of kites that I kept pulling out and tossing to one side. And as I pulled them out, I felt a desperation like nothing I've ever felt before. Desperation and tremendous fear because everyone was gone and I was alone. So what did you do, you ask me gently. I did nothing. Libby woke me. I found I was drenched in sweat, my heart was pounding, and I was actually weeping. Weeping, Dr. Rose. My God, I was weeping over a dream. I said to Libby, "There was nothing in the basket. I couldn't make them stop. I had her but they couldn't see I had her, so they went into the lake and didn't come out." She said, "You were only dreaming. Here. Come here. Let me hold you, okay?" And yes, Dr. Rose, she had spent the night, the way she often spends the night. She cooks a meal or I cook a meal, we do the washing up, and we watch the television. That's what I have been reduced to: the television. If Libby notices that we no longer listen to Perlman, Rubenstein, and Menuhin especially Yehudi, magnificent Yehudi, child of the instrument as I myself was she does not mention it. Indeed, she's probably grateful for the television. She is, at heart, so much an American. When we run out of programmes to watch, we drift into sleep. We sleep in the same bed and on the same bedclothes that haven't been changed for weeks. But they are not soiled with the mixture of our fluids. No. We have not managed that. Libby held me while my heart hammered like a miner hewing coal. Her right hand fondled the back of my head while her left hand caressed the length of my spine. From my spine, she worked her way down to my bum till we were pelvis to pelvis with only the thin flannel of my pyjamas and the cotton of her knickers between us. She whispered, "It's nothing, it's all right, you're fine," and despite those words which might have been succour under other circumstances, I knew what was supposed to happen next. Blood would rush to my cock, and I would feel the pulse of it. The pulse of it would grow and the organ would ready. I would lift my head to find her mouth or lower my mouth to find her breasts, and I would grind against her, grind against her slowly. I would pin her to the bed beneath us and take her in a silence broken only by our cries of pleasure like no other pleasure available to men and to women, as you know when we come. Together, of course. We come together. Anything less than simultaneous orgasm is completely unworthy of my prowess as a male. Except, of course, that is not what happened. How could it, I being who and what I am? Which is what? you ask me. A carapace covering nothing, Dr. Rose. No, less even than that. With my music gone I am nothing itself. Libby doesn't understand this because she can't see that who I was until Wigmore Hall was the music I made. I myself was merely an extension of the instrument, and the instrument was merely the manner in which my being took form. You say nothing at first when you hear this, Dr. Rose. You keep your eyes on me sometimes I wonder at the discipline it must take to keep your eyes on someone so patently not even in the room with you and you look thoughtful. But there is something more than consideration in your eyes. Is it pity? Confusion? Doubt? Frustration? You sit unmoving, in your widow's black. You observe me over the top of your tea cup. What are you crying out in the dream? you say. When Libby wakes you, what are you crying out, Gideon? Mummy. But I expect you knew that before you asked. 10 OCTOBER I can see my mother now because of the newspapers in the Press Association office. I glimpsed her on the opposite page to Sonia's picture before I thrust the tabloid out of my sight. I knew it was my mother because she was on my father's arm, because they were on the front step of the Old Bailey, because above them a headline declared Justice for Sonia! in four-inch type. So now at last I see her where before she was a blur. I see her blonde hair, I see the angles of her face, I see the way her chin is sharp and her lower jaw points to form it like the bottom of a heart. She is wearing black trousers and a soft grey sweater, and she comes to fetch me in the corner of my bedroom where Sarah-Jane and I are having a geography lesson. The Amazon River is what we're studying. How it coils like a snake for four thousand miles, from the Andes, through Peru and Brazil, and into the vast Atlantic Ocean. Mother tells Sarah-Jane that she must cut short the lesson, and I know that Sarah-Jane doesn't like this because her lips change from lips into an incision in her face although she says, "Of course, Mrs. Davies," and shuts our books. I follow Mother. We go downstairs. She takes me into the sitting room, where a man is waiting. He's a big man with lots of ginger hair. Mother says that he's a policeman, and he wants to ask me some questions, but I'm not to be afraid because she won't leave the room while he talks to me. She sits on the sofa and pats the cushion, right next to her thigh. And when I sit, she puts her arm round my shoulders, and I can feel her trembling as she says, "Go ahead, Detective Inspector." She's probably told me his name, but I can't remember it. What I do remember is that he pulls a chair over close to us and he leans forward with his elbows on his knees and his arms drawn up so that he can rest his chin on his thumbs. When he's close like this, I can smell cigars. The smoke must be in his clothes and his hair. It's not a bad smell, but I'm not used to it, and I shrink back against my mother. He says, "Your mum's right, lad. You've no reason to be frightened. No one is going to hurt you." When he speaks, I twist to gaze up at my mother, and I see that she's looking only at her lap. In her lap lie our hands, hers and mine, because she's taken my hand so that we're connected there as well: by her arm round my shoulders, by our fingers linking. And she squeezes my fingers but makes no reply to what the ginger-haired policeman has said. He asks me if I know what happened to my sister. I say I know something bad happened to Sosy. There were lots of people in the house, I tell him, and they took her to hospital. "Your mum's told you that she's with God now, hasn't she?" he asks. And I say yes. Sosy's with God. He asks me if I know what that means, to be with God? I tell him that it means Sosy died. "Do you know how she died?" he asks me. I lower my head. I feel my feet bounce against the front of the sofa. I say that I'm meant to practise my instrument for three hours, that Raphael has told me I must master something an Allegro, is it? if I want to meet Mr. Stern next month. Mother reaches down and stops my feet bouncing. She says that I'm to try to answer the policeman. I know the answer. I've heard the tramp of footsteps running up the stairs and into the bathroom. I've been a witness to the cries in the night. I've listened to the whispered conversations. I've walked in on questions being asked and accusations being made. So I know what happened to my little sister. In the bath, I tell him. Sosy died in the bath. "Where were you when Sosy died?" he asks me. Listening to the violin, I say. Mother speaks then. She says that Raphael has given me some music to listen to twice each day because I'm not playing it as well as I should. "So you're learning to play the fiddle, are you?" the policeman asks me kindly. "I'm a violinist, not a fiddler," I reply. "Ah," the policeman says and he smiles. "A violinist. I stand corrected." He settles more comfortably into his chair, rests his hands on the tops of his thighs, and says, "Lad, your mum tells me that she and your dad haven't yet told you exactly how your little sister died." In the bath, I repeat. She died in the bath. "True. But, lad, it wasn't an accident. Someone hurt the little girl. Someone meant to hurt her. Do you know what that means?" I picture sticks and stones, and that's what I say. Hurt means throwing rocks, I tell him. Hurt means putting out a foot in front of someone, hurt means hitting or pinching or biting. I think of all those things happening to Sosy. The policeman says, "That's one kind of hurting. But there's another sort, a sort done by an adult to a child. Do you know what I mean by that?" Getting spanked, I say. "More than that." And this is when Dad comes into the room. Has he just got home from work? Has he been at work at all? How long after Sonia's death is this? I'm trying to place the recollection in context, but the only context I have right now is that if the police are asking the family questions, it must be before Katja was charged with anything. Dad sees what's going on and he puts a stop to it. I remember that. And he's angry: both at Mother and at the policeman. He says, "What's going on here, Eugenie?" as the policeman gets to his feet. She says, "The inspector wanted to ask Gideon some questions," He says, "Why?" The policeman says, "Everyone must be questioned, Mr. Davies." Dad says, "You aren't assuming that Gideon ' And Mother says his name. She says it in the same way Gran says Jack when she's hoping to forestall an episode. Dad tells me to go to my room, and the policeman says that he's only prolonging the inevitable. I don't know what that means, but I do as I'm told -as I always do when Dad is the one giving the order and I leave the room. I hear the inspector say, "This only makes the situation more frightening for the lad," and I hear Dad say, "Now you listen to me as Mother says, "Please, Richard," in a voice that breaks. Mother weeping. I should be used to this by now. Wearing grey or black, grey of face as well, she has wept for more than two years, it seems. But weeping or otherwise, she isn't able to alter the circumstances of that day. From the mezzanine, I see the policeman leave. I see Mother show him to the door. I see him speak to her bent head, watch her intently, reach out to her then withdraw his hand. Then Dad calls out Mother's name and she turns. She doesn't see me as she goes back to him. Dad shouts at her behind the closed door. Then hands are on my shoulders and I'm pulled back from the railing. I look up to see Sarah-Jane Beckett standing over me. She crouches down. She puts her arm round my shoulders just as my mother did, but neither her arm nor her body is shaking. We stay just like that for several minutes and all the while Dad's voice is loud and sharp and Mother's is tentative and afraid. '.. . no more of this, Eugenie," Dad says, "I won't have it. Do you hear me?" I sense more than anger in those words. I sense violence, Granddad's kind of violence, violence that is forged on the wheel of a mind collapsing. I am afraid. I look up at Sarah-Jane, seeking.. . what? Protection? Affirmation of what I'm hearing below? Distraction? Any of it, all of it. But she is rapt by the drawing room door, and her gaze is fixed to its dark panels. She watches that door, unblinking, and her fingers tighten on my shoulder, taking me to the threshold of pain. I whimper and glance down at her hand and see that her fingernails are bitten and torn, with angry hangnails that are chewed and bleeding. But her face is glowing and her breathing is deep and she doesn't move till the conversation below us ceases and footsteps fire against the parquet floor. Then she takes my hand and pulls me along in her wake, up the stairs to the second floor, past the door of the nursery closed now and back to my room where the school books have been re-opened to the Amazon River that crawls like a poisonous serpent across a continent. What's happening between your parents? you ask me. And the answer seems obvious to me now. Blame. 11 OCTOBER Sonia's dead and there must be an reckoning. This reckoning must be made not only in a courtroom of the Old Bailey, not only in the courtroom of public opinion, but also in the courtroom of the family itself. For someone must take the burden of responsibility for Sonia: first for her birth imperfect as she was then for the scores of medical problems that plagued her short life, and last for her violent and premature death. I know this now although I could not have known it then: There is no surviving what occurred in that bathroom in Kensington Square if blame cannot be assigned somewhere. Dad comes to me. Sarah-Jane and I have finished our lesson, and she's left with James the Lodger. I've watched them from my window as they cross the flagstones at the front of the house and go out through the wrought iron gate. Sarah-Jane has stepped back to let James the Lodger hold the gate open for her, and she's waited for him on the other side and taken his arm. She's leaned into him that way women do, so that he might feel her nearly non-existent breasts press against his arm. But if he's felt them, he's given no sign. Instead he's started walking in the direction of the pub, and she's taken care to match her steps to his. I've put on a piece of music assigned by Raphael. I'm listening to it when my father joins me. I'm trying to feel the notes as well as to hear them because only if I feel the notes will I be able to find them on my instrument. Dad searches me out where I sit on the floor in a corner of the room. He squats in front of me and the music swirls round us. We live in the music till the movement is over. Dad turns off the stereo. He says, "Come here, son," and he sits on the bed. I go to him and stand before him. He studies me, and I want to wriggle away, but I don't. He says, "You live for the music, don't you?" and he smoothes his hand through my hair. "You concentrate on the music, Gideon. Just on the music and nothing else." I can smell the scent of him: lemons and starch, so completely unlike the scent of cigars. I say, "He asked me how Sosy died." Dad draws me to him and holds me. He says, "She's gone now. No one can harm you." He's talking about Katja. I've heard her leave. I've seen her in the company of the nun, so perhaps she's returned to the convent. Her name isn't mentioned within our little world. Neither is Sonia's. Unless the policeman brings one of them up. I say, "He said someone hurt Sosy." Dad says, "Think of the music, Gideon. Listen to the music and master it, son. That's all you have to do just now." But that turns out not to be the case because the policeman instructs my father to bring me to the station on the Earl's Court Road where we sit in a small, brightly lit room, in the company of a woman who wears a suit like a man and listens watchfully to the questions I'm asked, like a guardian who's there to protect me from something. Asking the questions is Ginger Hair himself. What he wants to know is something simple, he tells me. "You know who Katja Wolff is, don't you, lad?" I look from my father to the woman. She wears spectacles and when the light hits them, the lenses reflect it and hide her eyes. Dad says, "Of course, he knows who Katja Wolff is. He isn't an idiot. Get to the point." The policeman isn't to be hurried. He talks to me as if Dad were not there. He takes me from Sosy's birth, through Katja's coming to live with us, to the care that Sosy received at her hands. Dad protests at this. "How is an eight-year-old boy supposed to answer these sorts of questions?" The policeman says that children are observant, that I will be able to tell them more than Dad imagines possible. I've been given a can of Coke and a biscuit studded with nuts and sultanas, and they sit before me on the table like a three-dimensional exclamation mark. I watch the moisture form its beadwork on the can, and I run my finger through it to shape a treble clef on the curving side. I'm missing my three-hour morning practice to be here in the police station. This makes me restless, anxious, and difficult. I am already quite afraid. Of what? you ask me. Of the questions themselves, of giving the wrong answers, of the tension that I sense in my father which, now that I consider it, seems so at odds with my mother's grief. Shouldn't he have been prostrate with sorrow, Dr. Rose? Or at least desperate to get to the bottom of what happened to Sonia? But he isn't sorrowful, and if he's desperate, it seems like a feeling born of an urgency that he hasn't explained to anyone. Do you answer the questions despite your fear? you ask. I answer them as well as I can. They lead me through the two years that Katja Wolffhas lived in our home. For some reason, they seem to focus primarily on her relationship with James the Lodger and Sarah-jane Beckett. But at long last, they veer to her care ofSosy and to one particular point in that care. "Did you ever hear Katja shout at your little sister?" the policeman asked. No, I had not. "Did you ever see her discipline Sonia if she misbehaved?" No, I had not. "Did you ever see her do anything a little bit rough with Sonia? Shake her a bit when she wouldn't stop crying? Smack her bottom when she didn't obey? Pull on her arm to get her attention? Grab her leg to move her about when she changed her nappies?" Sosy cried a lot, I tell him. Katja got out of bed in the night to take care of Sosy. She talked German to her "In an angry voice?" and sometimes she cried as well. I could hear her from my room, and once I got up and looked into the corridor and saw her walking up and down, holding Sosy on her shoulder. Sosy wouldn't stop crying, so Katja put her back in her cot. She took a set of plastic baby keys and jangled them over Sosy's head and I heard her say, "biitte, bitte, bitte' which is German for please. And when the keys didn't make Sosy stop crying, she grabbed the side of the cot and gave it a shake. "You saw this?" The policeman leans towards me across the table. "You saw Katja do this? Are you certain, lad?" And something in his voice tells me I've given an answer that's pleasing. I say I'm certain: Sosy cried and Katja shook the side of the cot. "I think we're getting somewhere now," the policeman says. 12 OCTOBER How much of what a child reports is the stuff of his memory, Dr. Rose? How much of what a child reports is the stuff of his dreams? How much of what I say to the detective in those hours in the police station comes from what I actually witnessed? How much grows from sources as diverse as the tension I feel between my father and the policeman and my desire to please them both? It isn't much of aleap from shaking the side of a cot to shaking a child. And from there, it is the work of a moment to fancy having seen a small arm twisted, a small body jerked upright to put a coat on, a small round face squeezed and pinched when someone spits her food on the floor, a tangle of hair yanked through a comb, and legs wrenched into a pair of pink dungarees. Ah, you say. Your voice is noncommittal and carefully, scrupulously without judgement, Dr. Rose. Your hands, however, rise, pressed together in an attitude that resembles prayer. You place them just beneath your chin. You don't avert your gaze but I avert mine. I see what you're thinking, and I'm thinking it as well. My answers to that policeman's questions were what sent Katja Wolff to prison. But I didn't give evidence at her trial, Dr. Rose. So if what I said was so important why wasn't I called to give evidence? Anything less than the whole truth sworn to in a court of law was like an article appearing on the front page of a tabloid: something to be taken at face value only, something suggesting that further investigation into the matter by professionals might be required. If I said that Katja Wolff harmed my sister, all that would have come from that is their looking into the allegation. Isn't that the case? And if corroboration existed for what I told them, they would have found it. That has to be what happened, Dr. Rose. 15 OCTOBER I might have truly seen it. I might have been a witness to those things which I declared as having occurred between my little sister and her nanny. If so many sections of my mind are blank when it comes to the past, how illogical is it to assume that somewhere on that vast canvas reside images too painful to be remembered accurately? Pink dungarees are fairly accurate, you tell me. They come either from memory or from embellishment, Gideon. How could I embellish with such a detail as the colour of her dungarees if she didn't wear those dungarees? She was a little girl, you say with a shrug that's not dismissive so much as inconclusive. Little girls often wear pink. So you're saying I was a liar, Dr. Rose? Simultaneously a child prodigy and a liar? They're not mutually exclusive, you point out. I reel from this and you see something anguish, horror, guilt? on my face. You say, I'm not labelling you a liar now, Gideon. But you might have been then. Circumstances may have required you to lie. What sort of circumstances, Dr. Rose? ~You have no answer to give me other than this: Write what you remember. 17 OCTOBER Libby found me at the top of Primrose Hill. I was standing before that metal engraving that allows one to identify the buildings and monuments that one can see from the summit, and I was forcing myself to look from the engraving to the view working from east to west in order to pick each one out. From the corner of my eye, I saw her coming up the path, dressed in her black leathers. She'd left her helmet elsewhere, and the wind whipped her curls round her face. She said, "Saw your car in the square. I thought I'd find you here. No kite?" "No kite." I touched the metal surface of the engraving, my fingers resting on St. Paul's. I studied the skyline. "What's up, then? You don't look so great. Aren't you cold? What're you doing out here without a sweater?" Looking for answers, I thought. She said, "Hey! Anyone home? I'm, like, talking to you here." I said, "I needed a walk." She said, "You saw the shrink today, didn't you?" I wanted to say that I see you even when I don't see you, Dr. Rose. But I thought that she would misunderstand and take the comment for a patient's obsession with his doctor, which I do not have. She came round the engraving to face me, blocking my view. She reached across the sheet of metal and touched her palm to my chest, saying, "What's wrong, Gid? How can I help?" Her touch reminded me of all that isn't happening between us of all that would have been happening between a woman and a normal man and the weight of this idea was suddenly too much to bear in conjunction with what was already plaguing me. I said, "I may have sent a woman to prison." What?1 I told her the rest. When I had finished, she said, "You were eight years old. A cop was asking questions. You did the best you could in a bad situation. And you might have seen that stuff, too. There've been studies on this, Gid, and they say that kids don't make things up when it comes to abuse. Where there's smoke, there's fire. And anyway someone must have confirmed what you said if you didn't testify in court." "That's just it. I'm not so sure that I didn't testify, Libby." "But you said ' "I said I'd managed to remember the policeman, the questions, the station: all of them aspects of a situation that I'd blocked from my mind. What's to say I haven't also blocked from my mind giving evidence at Katja Wolff's trial?" "Oh. Yeah. I see." She looked out at the view and tried to tame her hair, sucking in on her lower lip as she thought about what I'd said. Finally, she declared, "Okay. Let's find out what really went on, then." "How?" "How tough can it be to dig up what happened at a trial that was probably covered by every newspaper in the country?" 19 OCTOBER We started with Bertram Cresswell-White, the barrister who'd prosecuted Katja Wolff for the Crown. Finding him, as Libby had promised, presented no problem. He had a room in chambers in the Temple, at Number Five Paper Buildings, and he agreed to see me once I managed to get him on the phone. He said, "I remember the case perfectly. Yes. I'm happy to speak to you about it, Mr. Davies." Libby insisted on going with me. She said, "Two heads are better. What you won't think to ask him, I will." So we drove to the river and entered the Temple from Victoria Embankment, where a cobblestone lane ducks beneath an ornate archway, which gives access to the best legal minds in the country. Paper Buildings sits on the east side of aleafy garden within the Temple, and the barristers who have chambers there possess the benefit of views of either the trees or the Thames. Bertram Cresswell-White had views of both, and when Libby and I were ushered into his office by a young woman delivering him a set of pink-ribboned briefs, we found him in an alcove behind his desk, taking advantage of the sight of a barge sailing sluggishly in the direction of Waterloo Bridge. When he turned from the window, I felt confident that I'd never seen him before, that there was nothing I'd deliberately or unconsciously wiped from my mind involving him. For surely I would remember so imposing a figure had he questioned me inside a courtroom. He must be six foot three inches tall, Dr. Rose, with the sort of shoulders one gets from rowing. He has the frightening eyebrows of a man over sixty, and when he looked at me, I felt the internal jolt one gets from being pierced by a stare that's used to intimidate witnesses. He said, "I never expected to meet you. I heard you play some years ago at the Barbican." He said to the young woman as she placed the briefs on his desk where already a stack of manila folders lay in the centre, "Coffee please, Mandy." And to Libby and me, "Will you have some?" I said yes. Libby said, "Sure. Thanks," and she looked round the room with her lips forming a small o through which she was blowing air. I know her well enough to see what she was thinking in her California fashion: "Some joint you got here." She wasn't wrong. Cresswell-White's room in chambers was designed to impress: hung with brass chandeliers, lined with bookshelves holding well-bound legal volumes, and heated by a fireplace in which even now was burning a gas fire with a realistic arrangement of artificial coals. He gestured us to a sitting area of leather armchairs that were gathered round a coffee table on a Persian rug. A framed photograph stood on this table. In it, a youngish man dressed in a barrister's wig and gown posed at Cresswell-White's side, his arms crossed and a grin on his face. "Is this your kid?" Libby said to Cresswell-White. "There's a big resemblance." "That's my son Geoffrey, yes," the barrister replied, 'at the conclusion of his first case." "Looks like he won it," Libby noted. "He did. He's just your age, by the way." This last was said to me with a nod as he set the folders on the coffee table. I saw that Crown Vs. Wolff ivas written on each of their tabs. "You were born a week apart at the same hospital, I discovered. I didn't know that at the time of the trial. But later when I was reading about you somewhere this would have been when you were a teenager, I suppose the article included the facts of your birth and there it was: the date, place, and time. It's remarkable, really, how connected we all are." Mandy returned with the coffee then and placed the tray on the table: three cups and three saucers, milk and sugar, but no pot: a subtle omission that seemed designed to determine the length of our stay. We doctored our drinks as she left us. I said, "We've come with some specific questions about Katja Wolff's trial." "You've not heard from her, have you?" Cresswell-White's tone was sharp. "Heard from her? No. Once she left our house when my sister died I never saw her again. At least .. . I don't think I saw her." "You don't think .. . ?" Cresswell-White picked up his cup of coffee and held it on his knee. He was wearing a good suit grey wool and cut exactly to fit him and the creases in his trousers looked as if they'd been placed there by royal decree. "I have no recollection of the trial," I told him. "I have no actual clear recollection of that whole period of time. Large areas of my childhood are rather misty, and I've been trying to clarify them." I didn't tell him why I was making this attempt to recapture the past. I didn't use the word repression, and I couldn't bring myself to reveal anything more. "I see." Cresswell-White gave a brief smile that disappeared as quickly as it flashed on his face. To me, the smile seemed both ironic and self-directed, and his next comment reinforced this assumption. "Gideon, would that we could all drink of the waters of Lethe like you. I, for one, would sleep better at night. May I call you Gideon, by the way? That's how I've always thought of you, although we've never met." That was a decisive answer to the main question I'd come with, and the relief I felt at hearing it told me something of how great my fears had been. I said, "So I didn't give evidence, did I? At her trial? I didn't give evidence against her." "Good God, no. I wouldn't put an eight-year-old child through that. Why do you ask?" "Gideon talked to the cops when his sister died," Libby said frankly. "He couldn't remember much about the trial, but he thought his testimony might have been what put Katja Wolff away." "Ah. I do see. And now that she's been released, you're wanting to prepare yourself in case ' "She's been released?" I broke in. "You didn't know? Neither of your parents informed you? I sent them both letters. She's been out for He glanced at some paperwork in one of the folders. "She's been out for just over a month." "No. No. I didn't know." I felt a sudden pulsing within my skull, and I saw the familiar pattern of bright speckling that always precedes twenty-four hours of pounding. I thought, Oh no. Please. Not here and not now. "Perhaps they didn't think it necessary." Cresswell-White said. "If she's going to approach anyone from that period of time, it's more likely to be one of them, isn't it? Or myself. Or someone who gave damning evidence against her." He went on to say something more but I couldn't hear because the pulsing in my head was growing louder and the speckling was turning to an arc of light. My body was like an invading army, and I who should have been its general was instead its target. I felt my feet begin a nervous tapping, as if they wanted to carry me from the room. I drew a breath and with the air came the image of that door once again: that blue blue door at the top of the stairs, those two locks upon it, that ring at its centre. I could see it as if I stood before it, and I wanted to open it but I could not raise my hand. Libby said my name. I heard that much through the pulsing. I held up a hand and signalled her, asking for a moment, just a moment please to recover. From what? you want to know, and you lean towards me, ever ready for a loop in the yarn into which you can insert your needle. Recover from what? Go back, Gideon. Go back to what? To that moment in Bertram Cresswell-White's rooms, to the pulsing in your head, to what led to the pulsing. All the talk about the trial led to the pulsing. We've had the trial before now. It's more than that. What are you avoiding? I'm avoiding nothing .. . But you're not convinced, are you, Dr. Rose? I'm supposed to be writing what I remember, and you've begun to question how trolling through the trial of Katja Wolff is going to take me back to my music. You caution me. You point out that the human mind is strong, that it holds onto its neuroses with a fierce protection, that it possesses the ability to deny and distract, and that this expedition to Paper Buildings might well be a monumental effort on the part of my mind to engage in displacement. Then that's how it will have to be, Dr. Rose. I do not know how else to go at this thing. All right, you say. Did your time with Cresswell-White trigger anything else then? Aside from the episode with your head? Episode. You choose that word with deliberation, and I know it. But I will not bite at the bait you cast out. I will tell you about Sarah-Jane instead. For this is what I learn from Bertram Cresswell-White: the part that I did not have in Katja Wolff's trial, the part that Sarah-Jane Beckett had. 19 OCTOBER 9:00 P.M. "She lived in the house with your family and Wolff, after all," Bertram Cresswell-White said. He'd taken up the first of the folders with Crown Vs. Wolff on them, and he'd begun to leaf through the documents inside, reading from time to time when his memory needed to be refreshed. "She was in a good position to observe what went on." "So did she see something?" Libby asked. She'd moved her chair closer to mine, and she'd placed her hand on the back of my neck as if she knew without my telling her what state my head was in. She kneaded my neck gently, and I wanted to be grateful. But I could sense the displeasure that the barrister felt at this open display of her affection for me, and I tensed because of this displeasure as I always tense when an older man looks on me with a critical eye. "She saw Wolff being sick in the mornings, every morning for a month before the child was killed," he said. "You know she was pregnant, don't you?" "My father told me as much," I said. "Yes. Well. Beckett saw the German girl's patience growing thin. The child your sister got her up three or four times each night, so she was short of sleep as well and that, in conjunction with the difficulties of morning sickness, wore her down. She began to leave Sonia too much alone, which was something that Miss Beckett came to realise since she gave you your lessons on the same floor of the house as your sister's nursery. Ultimately, she felt it her duty to report to your parents that Wolff was derelict in her duties. This precipitated a confrontation, which resulted in Wolff being sacked." "On the spot?" Libby asked. Cresswell-White consulted a file for the answer to this, saying, "No. She was given a month's notice. Your parents were quite generous considering the situation, Gideon." "But she never said in court that she saw Katja Wolff abuse my sister?" I asked. The barrister closed the folder, saying, "Beckett testified that they'd rowed the German girl and your parents. She testified that Sonia, over a period of days, was left to cry for as long as an hour in her cot. She said that on the evening in question, she heard the German girl giving Sonia her bath. But she couldn't name the time or the place where she'd witnessed any direct physical abuse." "Who did?" Libby asked. "No one," the barrister replied. "God," I murmured. Cresswell-White seemed to know what I was thinking because he set the folder back on the coffee table along with his cup and he spoke to me urgently. "A case in court is like a mosaic, Gideon. If there's no eye witness to the crime itself- as there wasn't in this situation then each piece of the case that the Crown presents must ultimately form a pattern from which an entire picture can be seen. The entire picture is what convinces the jury of the defendant's guilt. And that's what happened in Katja Wolff's case." "Because there was other testimony against her?" Libby asked. "Yes, indeed." "Whose?" My voice was weak I could hear the weakness as well as I could hate it and as fully as I could not remove it from my tone. "The police who took her first and only statement, the forensic pathologist who did the post-mortem, the friend with whom Wolff had initially claimed to be on the phone for one minute during which she left your sister alone, your mother, your father, your grandparents. It's less a case of encouraging anyone to say something directly against a defendant than of unfolding for the jury the situation as it existed and allowing them to draw their own conclusions about that situation. So everyone contributed to the overall mosaic. What we ended up with was a twenty-one-year-old German girl who had revelled in the publicity she got when she escaped from her country, who was able to emigrate to England because of the good will of a group of nuns, whose celebrity which had fed her ego quickly faded upon her arrival here, who was given a job that included room and board, who got herself pregnant, fell consequently ill, failed to cope, lost her job, and snapped." "Sounds like manslaughter, not murder," Libby said. "And would probably have gone down as such had she been willing to testify. But she wasn't willing. It was amazingly arrogant, but quite in keeping with her background if it comes down to it, I suppose. She wouldn't testify. And she made matters worse for herself by refusing to speak to the police more than that single time, as well as by refusing to speak to her solicitor, or even her barrister." "Why'd she clam up?" Libby asked. "I couldn't say. But the post-mortem showed there were previously healed fractures on your sister's body that no doctor could account for and no one else was able to explain, Gideon, and the fact that the German girl would say nothing to anyone concerning Sonia made it look as if she wasn't in the dark about those older injuries. And while the jury was instructed as they were in those days that Wolff's silence could not be held against her, juries are only human, aren't they? That silence is going to influence their thinking." "So what I said to the police ' Cresswell-White waved my words away, saying, '1 read your statement. Naturally, it was part of the brief. I re-read it, in fact, when you phoned me. And while I would have taken it into account twenty years ago, believe me I wouldn't have prosecuted Katja Wolff on the strength of it alone." He smiled. "After all, you were eight years old, Gideon. I had a son the very same age, so I was well aware of what boys are like. I had to consider the fact that Katja Wolff might have sorted you out about something in the days preceding your sister's death. And if that had been the case, you might have used your imagination for a bit of revenge on her, without knowing where your statement to the police could lead." "There you go, Gideon," Libby said. "So set your mind at rest if you're feeling guilty about Katja Wolff," Cresswell-White said, and his words were warm. "She did herself far more harm than you ever did her." 20 OCTOBER So was it revenge or was it memory, Dr. Rose? And if it was revenge, what it for? I can't think of a time that anyone save Raphael sought to discipline me, and the only times he did so were when he made me listen to a piece of music that I wasn't performing to his liking, and that was hardly punishment at all. Was The Archduke something you listened to? you inquire. I don't remember. But there were other pieces. The Lalo, compositions by Saint-Saens and Bruch. And did you master those other pieces? you ask. Once you listened to them, Gideon, were you able to play them? Of course. "Yes. I played them all. But not The Archduke? That piece has always been my bete noire. Shall we talk about that? There's nothing to say. The Archduke exists. I've never been able to play it well. And now I can't play the instrument itself. I'm not even close to being able to play it. So is my father right? Are we wasting our time? Is what I have just a case of nerves that has unnerved me and caused me to look elsewhere for a solution? "You know what I mean: Foist the problem onto someone else's shoulders so that I don't have to confront it myself. Hand it over to the shrink and see what she makes of it. Do you believe that, Gideon? I don't know what to believe. We drove home from Bertram Cresswell-White. I could tell that Libby thought we'd found a solution to my problems because the barrister had given me absolution from guilt. Her conversation was light how she planned to 'put it to Rock the next time he withholds my wages, the creep' and when she wasn't changing gear, she kept her hand on my knee. She'd been the one to suggest that she drive my car, and I was only too happy to let her. Cresswell-White's absolution hadn't obliterated the growing pain in my head. I was definitely better off not behind the wheel. Once back in Chalcot Square, Libby parked the car and turned my face to hers. "Hey," she said. "You've got the answers you were looking for, Gideon. Let's plan a celebration." She leaned towards me and touched her mouth to mine. I felt her tongue against my lips, and I opened them and allowed her to kiss me. Why? you ask. Because I wanted to believe what she said: that I had the answers I'd been looking for. Is that the only reason? No. Of course not. I wanted to be normal. And? All right. I managed a response of sorts. My skull was cracking open, but I reached for her head, held her, and insinuated my fingers into her hair. We stayed like that, our tongues creating that dance of expectation between us. I tasted in her mouth the coffee she'd drunk in Cresswell-White's rooms and I drank of it deeply, with the hope that the sudden thirst I felt would lead to the hunger I'd not experienced in years. I wanted that hunger, Dr. Rose, in order to know that I was alive. One hand still in her hair, holding her to me, I kissed her face and neck. I reached for her breast, and I felt her nipple hardening hardening erect and hardening through the material of her jersey and I squeezed that nipple to bring her both to pain and to pleasure and she moaned. She climbed from her seat onto mine, straddling me, kissing me, unbuttoned my shirt as I squeezed and released and squeezed and released and her mouth was on my chest and her lips were tracing a trail from my neck and I wanted to feel, I wanted to feel, and so I groaned and put my face in her hair. And there was the scent: fresh mint. From her shampoo, I suppose. But suddenly I was not in the car at all. I was in the back garden of our house in Kensington: in summer and at night. I've picked some mint leaves and I'm rolling them in my palms to release the smell and I hear the sounds before I see the people. They sound like diners smacking their lips over a meal, which is what I think the noise is at first until I pick them out of the darkness at the bottom of the garden where a flash of colour that is her blonde hair attracts my attention. They are standing against the brick she'd where the gardening tools are kept. His back is to me. Her hands cover his head. One of her legs crosses behind him above his arse, holding him to her and they grind together, they grind and grind. Her head is thrown back and he kisses her neck and I can't see who he is but I can see her. It's Katja, my little sister's nanny. It's one of the men from the house. Not someone else Katja knows? you ask. Not someone from the outside? Who? Katja knows no one, Dr. Rose. She sees no one but the nun from the convent and a girl who comes to call now and then, a girl called Katie. And this isn't Katie out here in the darkness because I remember Katie, God God I remember Katie now because she's fat and she's funny and she dresses with flair and she talks in the kitchen when Katja feeds Sonia and she says that Katja's escape from East Berlin was a metaphor for an organism only it wasn't organism that she said at all, it was orgasm, wasn't it, which is all she ever talks about. Gideon, you say to me, who was the man? Look at the shape of him, look at his hair. Her hands cover his head. He's bent to her anyway. I can't see his hair. Can't or won't? Which is it, Gideon? Is it can't or won't? I can't. I can't. Have you seen the lodger? Your father? Your grandfather? Raphael Robson? Who is it, Gideon? I DON'T KNOW. And Libby reached for me then, did what a normal woman does when she's aroused and wants to share her arousal. She laughed a breathless sort of laugh, said, "I can't even believe we're doing this in your car," and eased my belt out of its buckle, unfastened it, unbuttoned my trousers, put her fingers on the zipper, brought her mouth back to mine. And there was nothing within me, Dr. Rose. No hunger, no thirst, no heat, no longing. No pulse of blood to awaken my lust, no throbbing in the veins to harden my cock. I grabbed Libby's hands. I didn't need to make an excuse or say anything else to her. She may be American a little loud at times, a little vulgar, a little too casual, too friendly, and too forthright but she isn't a fool. She pushed herself off me and got back in her seat. "It's me, isn't it?" she said. "I'm too fat for you." "Don't be an idiot." "Don't call me an idiot." "Don't act like one." She turned to the window. It was steaming up. Light from the square diffracted through the steam and cast a muted glow against her cheek. Round, the cheek looked, and I could see the colour in it, the flush of a peach as it grows and ripens. The despair I felt for myself, for her, for the two of us together was what made me continue. "You're fine, Libby. You're one hundred percent. You're perfect. It isn't you." "Then what? Rock? It's Rock. It's that we're still married. It's that you know what he does to me, don't you? You've figured it out." I didn't know what she was talking about, and I didn't want to know. I said, "Libby, if you haven't realised by now that there's something wrong with me something seriously wrong ' And at that, she got out of the car. She shoved the door open and slammed it shut, and she did what she never does. She shouted. "Nothing is wrong with you, Gideon! Do you hear me? Nothing is fucking wrong with you!" I got out as well, and we faced each other over the bonnet of the car. I said, "You know that you're lying to yourself." "I know what's before my eyes. And what's before my eyes is you." "You've heard me try to play. You've sat in your flat and heard me. You know." "The violin? Is that what this is all about, Gid? The goddamn cock-sucking violin?" She smashed her fist against the car's bonnet so hard that I started. She cried, "You are not the violin. Playing music is what you do. It is not and has never been who you are." "And if I can't play? What happens then?" "Then you live, all right? You goddamn start living. How about that for a profound idea?" "You don't understand." "I understand plenty. I understand that you've got yourself, like, all hooked into being Mr. Violin. You've spent so many years scratching at the strings that you don't have any other identity. Why are you doing it? What's it s'posed to prove? Will your dad, maybe, love you enough if you play till your fingers bleed or something?" She swung away from the car and away from me. "Like, why am I even bothering, Gideon?" She began striding towards the house and I followed her, which was when I saw that the front door was open and that someone was standing on the steps and probably had been standing there since Libby had parked the car in the square. She saw him at the same moment that I did and for the first time I caught on her face an expression telling me she held an aversion to him that was as strong as if not stronger than the one my father held for her. "Then perhaps it's time you stopped bothering," Dad said. His voice was quite pleasant, but his eyes were steel. Gideon 20 OCTOBER 10:00 P.M. Dad said, "Charming girl. Does she always shriek like a fishwife in the square or was that something special this evening?" "She was upset." "That was obvious. As were her feelings about your work, by the way, which is something you might want to consider should you wish to carry on with her. ' I didn't want to discuss Libby with him. He's made his attitude plain from the start. There's no point wasting energy in trying to change it. We were in the kitchen, where we'd repaired once Libby left us on the steps. She'd said to him, "Richard, stay out of my way," and had pushed open the gate to her steps with a clang. She'd pounded down and into her flat, from where the volume of her pop music was now illustrating her state of mind. "We went to see Bertram Cresswell-White," I told Dad. "Do you remember him?" "I had a look at your garden earlier," Dad replied, canting his head towards the back of the house. "The weeds are starting to go rampant, Gideon. If you aren't careful, they're going to choke out the rest of the plants, what few there are. You know, you can hire a Filipino if you don't like gardening. Have you considered doing that?" From below in Libby's flat, the pop music blared. She'd opened her windows. Distorted phrases pounded up from the basement: How can your man .. . loves you .. . slow down, bay-bee.. .. I said, "Dad, I asked you ' "I've brought you two camellias, by the way." He walked to the window overlooking the garden. let him know .. . he's playing around! It was dark outside, so there was nothing to see except Dad's own reflection and mine on the glass. His was clear; mine wavered ghostlike as if affected by either the atmosphere or my inability to manifest strongly. "I've planted them on either side of the steps," Dad said. "They're not quite what I want yet in the way of blooms, but I'm getting close." "Dad, I'm asking you ' "I've weeded both planters, but you're going to have to see to the rest of the garden yourself." "Dad!" a chance to feel .. . free to ... the feeling grab you, bay-bee. "Or you can always ask your American friend if she wants to make herself useful in ways other than verbally assaulting you in the street or entertaining you with her quaint choice of music." "God damn it, Dad. I'm asking you a question." He turned from the window. "I heard the question. And ' Love him. Love him, baby. Love him. ' if I didn't have to compete with your little American's auditory entertainment, I might actually consider answering it." I said loudly, "Ignore it, then. Ignore Libby as well. You're good at ignoring things you can't be bothered with, aren't you, Dad?" The music suddenly stopped, as if I'd been heard. The silence following my question created nature's enemy, a vacuum, and I waited to see what would fill it. A moment later Libby's door banged shut. A moment after that the Suzuki fired up in the street. It roared as she angrily revved its motor. Then the sound faded as she spun out of Chalcot Square. Dad levelled a look at me, his arms crossed. We'd arrived at dangerous territory, the two of us, and I could feel that danger, like a live wire snapping in the air between us. But he said evenly, "Yes. Yes, I suppose I do that, don't I ? I ignore unpleasantness in order to get on with living." I sidestepped the implication behind his words. I said slowly as if speaking to someone who did not understand English, "Do you remember Cresswell-White?" He sighed and moved away from the window. He walked into the music room. I followed him. He sat near my stereo and racks of CDs. I remained by the door. "What do you want to know?" he asked me. I accepted the question as acquiescence, saying, "I've remembered seeing Katja in the garden. It was night. She was with someone, a man. They were I shrugged, feeling heat in my face, aware of the juvenility of that heat, which only made it seem to grow stronger. "They were together. Intimately. I can't remember who he was. I don't think I saw him clearly." "What's the point of this?" "You know the point. We've been through it all. You know what she what Dr. Rose wants me to do." "So tell me, is this particular memory supposed to relate to your music in some way?" "I'm trying to remember whatever I can. In whatever order I can. When I can. One memory seems to trigger another and if I hook enough of them together, there's a chance I can get to whatever it is that's causing the problem with my playing." "There is no problem with your playing. There is no playing." "Why won't you just answer? Why won't you help me? Just tell me who Katja ' "Are you assuming that I know?" he demanded. "Or are you really asking if I was the man with Katja Wolffin the garden? My relationship with Jill certainly indicates a predilection for younger women, doesn't it? And if I have that predilection now, why not then?" "Are you going to answer?" "Let me assure you that my current predilection is recent and directed solely at Jill." "So you weren't the man in the garden. The man with Katja Wolff." "I was not." I studied him. I wondered if he was telling the truth. I thought of that picture of Katja and my sister, of the way she smiled at whoever was taking it, of what that smile might mean. He said with a tired gesture towards the racks near his chair, "I had the opportunity to look through your CDs while I was waiting for you, Gideon." I waited, wary about this line of talk. "You've quite a collection. How many are there? Three hundred? Four?" I made no response. "A number of different interpretations of the same pieces by different artists as well." "I'm sure there's a point in this," I said at last. "But not a single copy of The Archduke. Why is that, I wonder?" "I've never been attracted to that particular piece." "Then why were you going to play it at Wigmore Hall?" "Beth suggested it. Sherrill went along. I had no real objection ' "To playing a piece of music that doesn't attract you?" he demanded. "What the hell were you thinking? You're the name, Gideon. Not Beth. Not Sherrill. You call the shots when it comes to a concert. They do not." "The concert's not what I want to talk about." "I understand that. Believe me, I entirely understand. You haven't wanted to talk about the concert from the beginning. You're seeing this damned psychiatrist, in fact, because you don't want to talk about the concert." "That's not true." "Joanne heard from Philadelphia today. They wanted to know if you'll be able to make your appearance there. The rumours have travelled to America, Gideon. How much longer do you expect to be able to hold the world at bay?" "I'm trying to get to the root of this in the only way I know." '"Trying to get to the root of this," he mocked. "You're doing nothing but opting for cowardice, and I wouldn't have thought that possible. I only thank God your grandfather didn't live to see this moment." "Are you thankful for me or for yourself?" He drew in a slow breath. One of his hands clenched into a fist. The other hand reached to cradle it. "What exactly are you saying?" I couldn't go further. We'd reached one of those moments when it seemed to me that irreparable harm could come from carrying on. And what good could have come from carrying on? What point would be served by forcing my father to turn the mirror from me onto his own childhood? onto his adulthood? onto everything he'd done and been and attempted in order to be acceptable to the man who'd adopted him? Freaks, freaks, freaks, Granddad had shouted at the son who'd created three of them. Because I too am a freak of nature, Dr. Rose. At heart I have always been one. I said, "Cresswell-White said everyone gave evidence against Katja Wolff. Everyone from the house, he said." Dad watched me through narrowed eyes before he made a comment, and I couldn't tell if his hesitation had to do with my words or with my refusal to answer his question. "That should hardly have come as a surprise to you in a murder trial," he finally responded. "He told me I wasn't called." "That's right." "I've remembered speaking to the police, though. I've remembered you and my mother arguing about my speaking to the police as well. I've remembered that there were a number of questions about the relationship between Sarah-Jane Beckett and James the Lodger." "Pitch ford." Dad's voice was heavier now, weary. "James Pitch ford was his name." "Pitch ford. Right. Yes. James Pitch ford." I'd been standing all this time, and now I picked up a chair and moved it to where Dad himself was sitting. I set it in front of him. "At the trial, someone said that you and my mother rowed with Katja in the days preceding.. . preceding what happened to Sonia." "She was pregnant, Gideon. She'd become lax in her responsibilities, your sister would have been a difficult charge for anyone and ' "Why?" "Why?" He rubbed his eyebrows as if trying to stimulate his own memory. When he dropped his hand, he looked up at the ceiling instead of at me, but when he lifted his head, I had time enough to see that his eyes had become red-rimmed. I felt a pang, but I did not stop him when he went on. "Gideon, I've already recited a litany of your sister's ailments for you. Down's Syndrome was only the tip of the iceberg. She was in and out of hospital for the two years that she was alive, and when she was out of hospital, she had to have someone to attend to her constantly. That someone was Katja." "Why didn't you hire a professional nurse?" He laughed, without humour. "We hadn't the funds." "The Government ' "State support? Unthinkable." And something within me jarred loose at that, my grandfather's words, spoken in a roar over the dinner table: "We do not lower ourselves to ask for charity, God damn it. A real man supports his family and if he can't do so, he shouldn't produce one in the first place. Keep it in your bloody trousers, Dick, if you can't face the consequences of waving it about. You hear me, boy?" And to this, Dad added, "And even if we'd tried for support, how far would we have got once the Government sorted out how much we were already spending to employ Raphael and Sarah-Jane? There was belt-tightening that we could have done. We chose not to do it initially." "What about the row with Katja?" "What about it? We learned from Sarah-Jane that Katja had been lax. We talked to the girl, and during the conversation it came out that she was being sick in the morning. It was a short leap to the fact that she was pregnant. She didn't deny it." "So you sacked her on the spot." "What else were we supposed to do?" "Who made her pregnant?" "She wouldn't say. And we did not sack her because she wouldn't say, all right? That was hardly the issue. We sacked her because she couldn't look after your sister properly. And there were other problems, earlier problems that we'd overlooked because she'd seemed fond of Sonia, and we liked that." "What sort of problems?" "Her clothing, which was never appropriate. We'd asked her to wear either a uniform or a simple, plain skirt and blouse. She wouldn't, no matter how often we instructed her to do so. She felt she had to express herself, she said. Then there were her visitors, who came and went at all hours of the day and night despite our asking her to limit their calls." "Who were they?" "I don't recall them. Good God, this was more than twenty years ago." "Katie?" "What?" "Someone called Katie. She was fat. She wore expensive clothes. I remember Katie." "Perhaps there was a Katie. I don't know. They came from the convent. They sat in the kitchen and talked and drank coffee and smoked cigarettes. And several times when Katja went out with them on her evening off, she came back inebriated and overslept in the morning. What I'm trying to tell you is that there were problems before the pregnancy issue came up, Gideon. The pregnancy as well as the illness that accompanied it was just the final straw." "But you and Mother argued with Katja when you gave her the sack." He shoved himself to his feet, walked across the room, and stood looking down at my violin case, closed now as it had been for days, the Guarneri hidden away from my sight so that it might cease to taunt me. "She didn't want to be sacked, obviously. She was several months pregnant, and she wasn't likely to find anyone else to employ her. So she argued with us. She pleaded to be kept on." "Then why not get rid of her baby? Even then, there were places.. . clinics .. ." "That's not the decision she made, Gideon. I can't tell you why." He squatted and released the clips on the case. He lifted the top. Inside, the Guarneri lay burnished by the light, and the glow of the wood seemed to make an accusation to which I had no simple reply. "So we argued. The three of us argued. And the next time Sonia was difficult, which happened the following day, Katja .. . took care of the problem." He lifted the violin from the case and undipped the bow. He said and his voice was not unkind and the rims of his eyes were redder than before, "You know the truth now. Will you play for me, son?" And I wanted to, Dr. Rose. But I knew that there was nothing within me, nothing of what had previously driven the music from my soul through my body to my arms and my fingers. I said, "I remember people in the house the night that .. . when Sonia .. . I remember voices, footsteps, my mother calling your name." "We were panicked. Everyone was panicked. There were paramedics. Firemen. Your grandparents. Pitch ford. Raphael." "Raphael was there?" "He was there." "Doing what?" "I don't recall. Perhaps he was on the phone to Juilliard. He'd been trying for months to come up with a way to convince us it was possible for you to attend. He was set on it, more set than you were." "So all this happened round the time of Juilliard?" Dad lowered his arms, which had been offering me the Guarneri. The violin hung from one hand and the bow from the other, orphans of my egregious impotence. He said, "Where is this taking us, Gideon? God knows I'm trying to cooperate, but you're not giving me anything to measure with." "Measure what?" "How do I know if there's progress? How do you know if there's progress?" And I could not answer him, Dr. Rose. Because the truth is what he fears and what I dread: I can not tell if this is any good, if the direction I'm heading is the direction that will take me back to the life I once knew and held so dear. I said, "The night it happened .. . I was in my room. I've remembered that. I've remembered the shouting and the paramedics the sound of them rather than the sight of them and I've remembered Sarah-Jane listening at the door, inside my room with me, saying that she wouldn't be leaving after all. But I don't remember her planning to leave before Sonia I could see Dad's right hand tighten on the neck of the Guarneri. Clearly, this wasn't the response he'd been looking for when he'd taken the instrument out of its case. He said, "A violin like this needs to be played. It also needs to be stored properly. Look at this bow, Gideon. Look at the condition of its hairs. And when was the last time you put a bow away without loosening it? Or don't you think about that sort of thing any longer, now that you're concentrating all your efforts on the past?" I thought of the day that I'd tried to play, the day Libby had heard me, the day that I'd learned for certain what I'd only felt like a premonition before: that the music was gone, and irretrievably so. Dad said, "You never used to do this sort of thing. This instrument wasn't just left lying on the floor. It was stored away from the heat and the cold. It wasn't near a radiator, nor was it within six yards of an open window." "If Sarah-Jane was planning to leave before everything happened, why didn't she leave?" I asked. "The strings haven't been cleaned since Wigmore Hall, have they? When was the last time you failed to clean the strings after a concert, Gideon?" "There wasn't a concert. I didn't play." "And haven't played since. Haven't thought to play. Haven't had the nerve to ' "Tell me about Sarah-Jane Beckett!" "God damn it! Sarah-Jane Beckett is not the issue." "Then why won't you answer?" "Because there's nothing to say. She was sacked. All right? Sarah-Jane Beckett was sacked as well." This was last answer I'd been expecting. I'd thought he would tell me she'd become engaged or found a better position or decided to make a change in career. But that she, too, had been sacked along with Katja Wolff.. . I'd not considered that possibility. Dad said, "We'd had to cut back. We couldn't keep Sarah-Jane Beckett and Raphael Robson and have a nursemaid for Sonia as well. So we'd given Sarah-Jane two months' notice." "When?" "Shortly before we discovered Katja Wolff was pregnant." "So when Sonia died and Katjaleft .. ." "Yes. There was no need for Sarah-Jane to go as well." He turned and replaced the Guarneri in its case. His movements were slow; his scoliosis made him seem like a man in his eighties. I said, "Then Sarah-Jane herself might have ' "She was with Pitchford when your sister was drowned, Gideon. She swore to that and Pitchford confirmed it." Dad straightened from the case and turned back to me. He looked done in. I felt anguish, guilt, and sorrow surge within me to know that I was forcing him to consider matters he'd buried along with my sister. But I had to continue. It seemed that we were making progress for the first time since I'd had the episode at Wigmore Hall and yes, I use that word deliberately just as you have done, Dr. Rose, an episode and feeling that progress was being made, I could not back away from it. I said, "Why didn't she talk?" "I just said she ' "Katja Wolff, not Sarah-Jane Beckett. Cresswell-White said that she spoke to the police once and never spoke to anyone else. About the crime, that is. About Sonia." "I can't answer that question. And Here he took up the sheet music that I'd left on the stand when I'd thought to play, and he closed it slowly, seeming to put an end to something that neither one of us wanted to name. "I can't understand why you're dwelling on this at all. Hasn't Katja Wolff damaged our lives enough?" "It's not Katja Wolff," I said. "It's what happened." "You know what happened." "I don't know everything." "You know enough." "I know that when I look over my life, when I write about it or talk about it, all I can remember with accuracy is the music: how I came to it, the exercises that Raphael had me engage in, concerts I gave, orchestras I performed with, conductors, concert masters, journalists who interviewed me, recordings I made." "That's been your life. That's who you are." But not according to Libby. I could hear her shouting at me once again. I could feel her frustration. I could drown in the wretchedness that flooded her heart. And I am adrift, Dr. Rose. I am a man without a country any longer. I once existed in a world I recognised and was comfortable with, a world with definite borders, peopled by citizens all speaking a language I understood. All that is foreign territory to me now, but it is no less foreign than the land I wander in, without a guide or a map, at your instructions. Chapter Eleven Yasmin Edwards had a busy morning, for which she was grateful. She'd received half a dozen referrals from a women's shelter in Lambeth, and the six women in question all turned up at the shop at once. None of them were needing wigs these usually went to women undergoing chemo or afflicted with alopecia but all of them wanted make overs and Yasmin was happy to accommodate them. She knew what it felt like to be down and out because of a man, and she wasn't surprised when the women first hung back and spoke in hushed tones about their personal appearance and the changes that they hoped Yasmin Edwards could make for them. So Yasmin started out gently, letting them decide for themselves over magazines, coffee, and biscuits. "You make me look like this one?" was the question that broke the ice among them. One of the women who wouldn't see sixty again and who must have tipped the scales at nearly twenty stone had chosen a picture of a nubile black model with sumptuous breasts and pouting lips. "You look like that when we done, girl, I'm taking up residence in this damn shop," one of the others said. Soft giggles among them turned to hearty laughter, and everything was easy after that. Oddly, it was the scent of the cleaning fluid that Yasmin was using on the work tops after the women left that took her back abruptly to the morning. For a moment, she wondered why until she recalled that she'd been cleaning up the few wig hairs that Daniel had missed after his washing chore on the previous night when Katja came into the bathroom to clean her teeth. "You going in to work today?" Yasmin asked her companion. Daniel had already left for school, so they were free to talk openly for the first time. Or at least they were free to make the attempt. "Of course," Katja said. "Why would I not?" She still made her w's into v's. Sometimes it seemed to Yasmin that twenty years away from her native language would have been enough to alter even Katja's most deeply rooted habits, but still they remained. There had been a time when Yasmin had found her companion's way of speaking English appealing, but she did not find it so now. She couldn't determine when the charm had diminished for her. Recently, she thought. But she couldn't afford to put an exact date on the change in her feelings. "He said that you'd missed. Four times in twelve weeks is what he said." In the mirror above the basin, Katja's blue eyes fixed on Yasmin's. "You believe that, Yas? He's a copper and you and I are .. . You know what we are to him: fluff and dagger from inside, back in the street. I saw how he looked at us if you didn't. So why should a man like that tell us what really is when lies will serve to put us apart from each other?" Yasmin couldn't deny that there was some truth in what Katja was saying. In her experience, police couldn't be trusted with anything. Indeed, no one in the whole legal system could be trusted if it came down to it. In the legal system, plods settled on a story and bent the facts to fit it, presenting those facts to magistrates in such a way that bail was deemed foolhardy and a trial in the Old Bailey followed by alengthy prison sentence was the only cure for what got called a social ill. Like she had been a disease and Roger Edwards had been what she'd infected instead of what each of them had really been: she nineteen and the longtime plaything of stepfathers, stepbrothers, and the friends of both and he a yellow-haired Aussie who'd chased his girlfriend to London where he'd been dumped, with a book of poems tucked under his arm. That was the same book of poems that he'd left at the till at Sainsbury's where she rang up his groceries once a week, a book of poems that made her think he was something better than what she was used to. And he was, Roger Edwards. He was different and better in so many ways. Just not in the ways that counted. It was never simple: what brought a man and a woman together. Oh, it looked that way on the surface hard cock and hot cunt but it never was. There was no way to explain it: her history and Roger's, her fears and his mighty desperation, their mutual needs and their unspoken beliefs about what each partner should be to the other. There was only what happened. And what happened was a tedious series of accusations that were the children born of his addictions and an even more tedious series of denials that were never enough, not without proof which was in itself a spur to more accusations. And these were flung with a building paranoia that was itself fuelled by the drugs and the drink until she wanted him out of her life, out of their child's life, and out of her flat no matter that their son would go fatherless like so many boys within their community, fatherless despite the promise she'd made to herself that Daniel would not grow up trapped in a web of women. Roger wouldn't go, though. He fought against going. He really fought. He fought the way a man fights another man, in silence and with strength and closed fists. But she was the one with the weapon, and she used it. Five years she'd served. She'd been arrested and charged. Because she was six feet tall, she was more than five inches taller than her husband, so gentlemen and ladies of the jury why had this woman felt it was necessary to use a knife to stop him when he allegedly became abusive? He'd been what was called under the influence of a foreign substance so most of his punches had gone wide or short or merely grazed her instead of connecting with her dusky flesh, instead of bruising or better yet breaking bones. Yet she used a knife on this unfortunate man, and she managed to connect that knife with his body no less than eight times. More blood would have been useful in the subsequent investigation by the local police. Her blood, that is, instead of Roger's. As it was, all she had was the story itself in which an attractive bloke on the rebound catches the eye of a girl who's in hiding from the world. He coaxes her out from beneath her rock; she promises him a cool draught of forget. And if he used a little and he drank a lot, what worry was there in that? That was, to her, familiar behaviour. It was the descent into squalor and the demand for her to earn money at night in doorways, in parked cars, or leaning against a tree on the common with her legs spread wide that she hadn't been prepared to accept from Roger Edwards. "Get out, get out!" she'd screamed at him. And it was her screaming and those words that she screamed that the neighbours later remembered. "Just tell us the story, Mrs. Edwards," the coppers had said to her over her husband's bloodied and very dead body. "All you need to do is to tell us the story and we'll get all this sorted out straightaway." Five years in prison had been the consequence of her telling her story to the police. Five years in prison had been their way of getting things sorted out straightaway. She'd lost those years with her son, she'd come out with nothing, and she'd spent the next five years working, planning, begging and borrowing, making it up to them both. So Katja was right, and Yasmin knew it. Only a fool trusted anything a copper had to say. But there was more than just the detectives's words about Katja's absences from work, from the flat, from anywhere at all that she had to contend with. There was also the car. And no matter whether the black man could be trusted, the car itself could not lie to her. Yasmin said, "Headlamp on the car got itself broke, Katja. He looked that over, the plod, last night. He asked how it broke." "Are you asking me the same?" "S'pose." Vigorously, Yasmin wiped the old bathtub, as if doing so and in such a manner could rub away the spots where the porcelain had worn through to the metal lining beneath it. "I didn't hit anything that I recall. You?" "Why did he want to know? What business is it of his how a headlamp was broken?" Katja had finished her teeth and she leaned forward into the mirror, inspecting her face as she always did, as Yasmin herself had done for months upon her final release from prison, checking to see that she was really there, in this particular room, guard-less, wall-less, lock-and-key-less, with what was left of her life in front of her and trying not to be completely terrified of that empty, unstructured stretch of years. Katja washed her face and patted it dry. She turned from the basin and leaned against it, watching Yasmin finish with the tub. When the taps were turned off Katja spoke again. "What is he after us for, Yas?" "You," Yasmin said. "He's not after me. It's you. How'd that headlamp get busted?" "I didn't know it was broken," Katja said. "I haven't looked .. . Yas, how often do you look at the front of the car? Did you know it was broken before he pointed it out to you? No? It could have been broken for weeks. How badly is it broken? Do the lights still work? Someone probably reversed into it in the car park. Or in the street." True, Yasmin thought. But wasn't there something too quick, too anxious to be believed about Katja's words. And why didn't she ask which headlamp? Wouldn't it be logical for her to want to know which of the headlamps it was? Katja added, "It could have happened when you were driving it since neither one of us knew it was broken." "Yeah," Yasmin admitted. "I see that." "Then ' "He wanted to know where you were. He went to where you work and he asked about you." "So he says. But if he really talked to them, and if they really told him I'd missed four days, why did he give that information only to you and not to me as well? I was standing there, right in the room with the two of you. Why did he not ask me for my excuse? Think about that. You know what it means: he wants to tear us apart because it'll serve his purposes. And if he manages to do it to tear us apart he won't waste much effort putting us back together. Even if he gets what he wants.. . whatever it is." "He's investigating something," Yasmin said. "Or someone. So .. ." She took a breath that was deep, that hurt. 's there something you're not telling me, Katja? Something you hiding from me?" "This is just how it works," Katja said. "This is just exactly how he wants it to work." "But you're not answering me, are you?" "Because I've nothing to say. Because I have nothing to hide from you or from anyone else." Her eyes held Yasmin's. Her voice was firm. And they both made promises, those eyes and that voice. They also reminded Yasmin of the history between them, the solace that had been offered by one and grasped by the other, and what had finally grown from that solace to sustain them both. But nothing from the heart was indestructible. Experience had taught Yasmin Edwards that. She said, "Katja, you'd say if .. ." "If what?" "If.. ." Katja knelt on the floor next to the bathtub, next to Yasmin. Gently, she ran her fingers round the curve of Yasmin's ear. "You waited five years for me to get out," she said. "There is no if, Yas." They kissed long and tenderly and Yasmin didn't think as she'd thought at first How bloody mad, I'm kissing a woman .. . she's touching me .. . I'm letting her touch me .. . Her mouth is here, it's there, it's tasting me where I want to be tasted .. . this is a woman and what she's doing is yes, yes, I want this, yes. All she thought was what it felt like to be with her and what it felt like to be safe and sure. Now in the wig shop, she packed the make-up back into its case and threw into the rubbish the kitchen towels with which she'd wiped the work top at which the women had sat, one by one, and allowed her to make them beautiful. She smiled at the pictures she had of them in her mind, all of them laughing, giggling like school girls, given for the morning a chance to be something more than what they'd chosen for themselves. Yasmin Edwards enjoyed her work. When she considered it, she had to shake her head in wonder that a stretch in prison had directed her not only to useful employment but also to a companion and to a life that she loved. She knew that this sort of conclusion to the kind of troubles she'd had was rare. Behind her, the shop door opened. That would be Mrs. Newland's oldest daughter Akisha, coming right on time to pick up Mum's freshly washed wig. Yasmin turned to the door, offering a smile of welcome. "Can I have a word?" the black constable said. Major Ted Wiley was the last person in Henley-on-Thames to whom Lynley and Havers showed the photograph of Katja Wolff. They hadn't planned it that way. In the normal course of events they would have shown him the picture first since, at least from his own account of it as Eugenie Davies' closest companion and neighbour across the street from Doll Cottage, he was the person most likely to have seen Katja Wolff in Henley had the woman come calling. But upon their arrival in Friday Street, they'd found Wiley's Books closed, with a be-right-back sign stating the time of the major's return. So they offered the photograph round every other establishment on Friday Street, having no luck anywhere. Havers wasn't surprised. "This is the wrong tree, Inspector," she informed Lynley. "It's an institutional picture," he replied, 'as bad as a passport. It might not even resemble her. Let's try at the Sixty Plus Club before we count her out. If her other visitor waylaid her there, what's to say Katja Wolff didn't do likewise?" The Sixty Plus Club was reasonably populated even at that hour of the day. Most of the members present were engaged in what looked like a bridge tournament although an intense group of four women were also playing a serious game of Monopoly, with dozens of red hotels and green houses littering the board. Additionally in a narrow room that appeared to be a kitchen three men and two women sat round a table, manila folders open in front of them. The red head of Georgia Ramsbottom bobbed among this latter group, and the sound of her voice rose higher than even the singing of Fred Astaire who was dancing cheek to cheek -or at least claiming to do so with Ginger Rogers on a television screen in an alcove set up with comfortable armchairs. "Recruiting internally is much more reasonable," Georgia Ramsbottom was saying. "We ought to at least try it, Patrick. If someone amongst us wishes to direct the club now that Eugenie's gone ' One of the women interrupted her, but at a reduced volume. She countered with, "I find that highly offensive, Margery. Someone has to take the interests of the club to heart. I suggest we set aside our grief and deal with this now. If not today then certainly before more messages stack up to be answered Here she gestured with a small fan of Post-Its on which the aforementioned messages were ostensibly written 'and more bills go asking to be paid." There was a rumble of what might have been either assent or disapproval, something that wasn't fully clarified because at that moment, Georgia Ramsbottom descried Lynley and Havers. She excused herself from the table and came to them. The Sixty Plus Club's Executive Committee were in a meeting, she announced, every bit as if the agenda that the committee were following were of national significance. The Sixty Plus Club could not long remain rudderless and director less although explaining that a 'suitable period of mourning' for Eugenie Davies did not necessarily obviate the process of replacing her was proving to be quite a challenge, Georgia revealed. "I doubt this will take very long," Lynley told her. "We'll just need a few moments alone. With everyone. One at a time. If you'd be so good as to organise that .. ." "Inspector," Georgia said and she managed just the appropriate amount of effrontery in her words, 'the members of Henley's Sixty Plus Club are very private, decent, upstanding people. If you've come here thinking that one of them was involved in Eugenie's death ' "I come here thinking nothing in particular," Lynley broke in pleasantly, but he didn't miss the third person pronoun that Georgia had used to differentiate between herself and the rest of the club's members. "So perhaps we can start with you, Mrs. Ramsbottom. In Mrs. Davies' office .. . ?" All members' eyes followed them as Georgia stiffly led the way to the office door. It was open today, and Lynley noted as they entered that all items remotely related to Eugenie Davies had already been packed away in a cardboard box that sat forlornly at one side of her desk. He wondered idly what the fearsome Mrs. Ramsbottom considered a suitable period of mourning for the club's director. She certainly wasn't letting any grass grow when it came to sweeping the club clean of her. He wasted no time in small talk once Havers had shut the door and placed herself in front of it, notebook in hand. He took the seat behind the desk, gestured Georgia Ramsbottom into the chair in front of the desk, and brought out the photograph of Katja Wolff. Had Mrs. Ramsbottom seen this woman in the vicinity of the Sixty Plus Club or anywhere else in Henley, for that matter, in the weeks preceding Mrs. Davies' death? The production of the photograph seemed to prompt Georgia to say, "The killer .. . ?" in the sort of reverential tone that would have done service in an Agatha Christie novel. She was suddenly all helpfulness, perhaps altered by the realisation that the police were not seeking the killer among the over-sixty crowd. She hastened to add, "I do know it was deliberate, Inspector, and not just an arbitrary hit-and-run. Dear Teddy told me when I rang him last evening." Across the room, Havers mouthed Dear Teddy. Thwarted love among the ruins, her expression implied. She did some furious scribbling in her notebook. Georgia heard the sound of her pencil scritching across the paper. She glanced over her shoulder. Lynley said, "If you'd have a look at the photograph, Mrs. Ramsbottom .. ." Georgia did so. She studied the photo. She held it close to her face. She held it at arm's length. She tilted her head. But no, she said at last, she'd never seen the woman in the picture. Not round Henley-on-Thames, at least. "Somewhere else?" Lynley asked. No, no. She didn't mean to imply that. Of course, she might have seen her in London a stranger in the street, perhaps? when she went up to visit her darling grandchildren. But if she had done, she couldn't remember. "Thank you," Lynley said, and he prepared to dismiss her. But he found that Georgia wasn't inclined to be so easily disposed of. She crossed her legs, ran a hand along one of the pleats in her skirt, reached down to smooth her tights, and said, "You'll want to talk to Teddy, of course, won't you, Inspector?" It sounded more like a suggestion than a question. "He lives near Eugenie, dear Teddy does but I expect you already know that, don't you? and if this woman was hanging about or perhaps paying calls on her, he might well know. Indeed, Eugenie might have told him herself because they were great friends, weren't they, the two of them. So she might have confided in him should this woman have .. ." Then Georgia hesitated, a heavily ringed finger tapping against her cheek. "But no. Nooo. Perhaps not, after all." Lynley sighed inwardly. He wasn't about to engage in the information game with the woman. If she wanted to enjoy the power of playing out what she knew like a fishing line, she was going to have to find someone else to swim in her river. He bluffed her with, "Thank you, Mrs. Ramsbottom," and nodded at Havers to usher her from the room. Georgia showed her hand. "All right. I spoke to dear Teddy," she confided. "As I said earlier, I phoned him last night. After all, one does want to offer condolences when someone loses a loved one, even in situations in which the scales of devotion aren't as evenly balanced as one would hope to see in a dear friend's love life." "The dear friend being Major Wiley," Havers clarified with some impatience. Georgia treated her to another imperious glance. She said to Lynley, "Inspector, I do feel you might benefit from knowing .. . not that I wish to speak ill of the dead.. . But I don't think we can call it speaking ill, can we, if what I say is simply a fact?" "What are you getting at, Mrs. Ramsbottom?" "It's just that I'm wondering if I should I tell you something if it may not actually be germane to your case." She waited for some sort of reply or reassurance. When Lynley said nothing, she was forced to continue. "But then again, it may be germane. It probably is. And if I hold back .. . It's poor dear Teddy I'm thinking of, you see. The thought of something becoming public knowledge, something that might hurt him .. . That's difficult for me to bear." Lynley thought that unlikely. He said, "Mrs. Ramsbottom, if you have information about Mrs. Davies that might lead to her killer, it's in your best interests to tell us directly." It's in our interests as well, Havers' expression said. She looked as if she'd have liked to throttle the maddening woman. "Otherwise," Lynley added, 'we have work to do. Constable, if you'll assist Mrs. Ramsbottom in organising the others for interviews .. . ?" "It's about Eugenie, then," Georgia said hastily. "I hate to say it. But I will. It's this: She didn't reciprocate, not completely." "Reciprocate what?" "Teddy's feelings. She didn't share the strength of his feelings for her, and he didn't know that." "But you did," Havers said from the door. "I'm not blind," Georgia said, over her shoulder to Havers. And then to Lynley, "I'm also not a fool. There was someone else, and Teddy didn't know. He still doesn't know, poor man." "Someone else?" "Some people might argue that there was something permanently on Eugenie's mind and that's what kept her from getting close to Teddy. But I say it was someone on her mind and she hadn't yet got round to dropping the bomb on the poor man." "You saw her with someone?" Lynley asked. "I didn't need to see her with someone," Georgia said. "I saw what she did when she was here: the phone calls that she took behind closed doors, the days when she left at half past eleven and never returned. And she drove her car to the club on those days, Inspector, though the rest of the time she walked here from Friday Street. And she wasn't doing her volunteer work at the nursing home on those days she drove, because she volunteered at Quiet Pines on Mondays and Wednesdays." "And the days she left at half past eleven?" "Thursday or Friday. Always. Once a month. Sometimes twice. What does that suggest to you, Inspector? It suggests an assignation to me." It could well suggest anything, Lynley thought, from a doctor's appointment to a session with the hairdresser. But while what Georgia Ramsbottom was telling them was coloured by her obvious dislike of Eugenie Davies, Lynley could not ignore the fact that her information matched up with what they'd seen in the dead woman's diary. After thanking her for her cooperation no matter how much he'd had to wrest it from her Lynley sent the woman back to her committee and had Havers assist her in organising the rest of the club members present for individual examinations of the photograph of Katja Wolff. He could tell that everyone wanted to be helpful as he spoke to each of them, but no one was able to attest to having ever seen the pictured woman in the environs of the club. They headed back to Friday Street, where Lynley had left his car in front of Eugenie Davies' tiny house. As they walked, Havers said, "Satisfied, Inspector?" "About what?" "The Wolff angle. Are you satisfied now?" "Not entirely." "But you can't still be considering her for the killer. Not after that." This, with a cock of her thumb back in the direction of the Sixty Plus Club. "If Katja Wolff ran over Eugenie Davies, she would have had to know where she was going that night in the first place, right? Or she would have had to follow her into London from here. Do you agree?" "That seems obvious." "So in either case, she would have had to establish some kind of contact with her once she got out of prison. Now, we may get some joy from those telephone records, and we may find out that Eugenie Davies and Katja Wolff were spending their evenings nattering like schoolgirls on the phone for the last twelve weeks for reasons that're completely obscure. But if we don't get something from those BT records, then what we're left with is someone following her up to town from here. And we both know which someone would have had an easy time of that, don't we?" She indicated the door of the bookshop where the be-right-back sign had been removed. Lynley said, "Let's see what Major Wiley has to say about things," and he opened the door. They found Ted Wiley unpacking a box of new books and arranging them on a table top that bore a hand lettered sign reading new releases. He wasn't alone in the shop. At the far end a woman in a paisley headscarf sat in a comfortable armchair, happily sipping from a Thermos top with a book open upon her knees. "Saw your motor when I got back," Wiley said in reference to the Bentley as he lifted three books from the box. He dusted each with a cloth before setting it on the table. "What've you come up with, then?" The man appeared to have an interesting capacity to direct, order, and demand, Lynley thought. He seemed to assume that the London detectives had come to Henley-on-Thames with the intention of reporting to him. He said, "It's too early in the investigation to reach a conclusion about anything, Major Wiley." "What I know is this," Wiley said. "The longer things drag on, the less likely it is that you'll catch the bastard. You must have leads. Suspicions. Something." Lynley offered the photograph of Katja Wolff. "Have you seen this woman? In the neighbourhood, perhaps. Or somewhere else round town." Wiley fumbled in the breast pocket of his jacket and brought out a pair of heavy looking horn-rimmed spectacles, which he flipped open with one hand and fixed on his large and florid nose. He squinted at Katja Wolffs likeness for a good fifteen seconds before saying, "Who is she?" "She's called Katja Wolff. She's the woman who drowned Eugenie Davies' daughter. Do you recognise her?" Wiley examined the picture again and it was apparent from his expression that he very much wanted to recognise her, possibly to put an end to the anxiety of not knowing who had struck down and killed the woman he loved, possibly for another reason altogether. But ultimately, he shook his head and thrust the picture back at Lynley. "What about that bloke?" he asked. "The Audi. He was furious, he was. Bent on hurting someone. I could feel it. And the way he drove off.. . He was just the sort of bastard who blows. Doesn't get what he wants so he makes a statement and the statement is usually a body. Or bodies. You know what I mean. Hunger ford. Dunblane." "We haven't ruled him out," Lynley said. "Constables back in town are working through a list of Audis from Brighton. We should know something at that end soon." Wiley grunted and removed his glasses. He shoved them into his jacket pocket. Lynley said, "You mentioned that Mrs. Davies wanted to talk to you, that she said specifically that she had something to tell you. Have you any idea what that was, Major Wiley?" "None." Wiley reached for more books. He checked the dust jackets of these, going so far as to open each one and to run his fingers along the inner flap as if he were looking for imperfections. As he did so, Lynley reflected upon the fact that a man generally knows when the woman he loves does not reciprocate the emotion. A man also knows he can't avoid knowing when the passion within a woman he loves begins to wither. Sometimes he lies to himself about the fact, denying it till the moment comes when he can no longer avoid it or escape it altogether. But he always knows even subconsciously when things aren't right. Openly admitting this is a form of torture, though. And some men can't cope with such torture, so they choose another route to deal with the matter. Lynley said, "Major Wiley, you heard the messages on Mrs. Davies' answer machine yesterday. You heard the men's voices, so it can't be a surprise to you when I ask if Mrs. Davies might have been involved elsewhere besides with you, if that's what she might have wanted to tell you." I've thought about it," Wiley said quietly. "Nothing else has been in my mind since .. . Damn. God damn." He shook his head and shoved his hand into his trouser pocket. He brought out a handkerchief and honked into it loudly enough to disturb the reading of the woman in the armchair. She looked round, saw Lynley and Havers, and said, "Major Wiley? Is everything all right?" He nodded, raised a hand as if to underscore his assent, and turned his shoulder so she couldn't see his face. She seemed to feel this was answer enough, for she went back to her reading as Wiley said to Lynley, "I feel a perfect fool." Lynley waited for more. Havers tapped her pencil against her notebook and frowned. Wiley gathered himself together and told them the apparent worst there was for him to tell: about the nights he watched Eugenie Davies' cottage from his upstairs window and about one night in particular when his surveillance had finally been rewarded. "One a.m.," he said. "It was that bloke with the Audi. And the way she touched him .. . Yes. Yes. I loved her and she was involved with someone else. So was that what she wanted to tell me, Inspector? I don't know. I didn't want to know then, and I don't want to know now. What's the point?" "The point is finding her killer," Havers said. "You think it's me?" "What sort of car do you drive?" "A Mercedes. It's right there, in front of the shop." Havers looked to Lynley for direction, and he nodded. She went outside and the two men watched her giving the car's front end a thorough inspection. It was black, but the colour was inconsequential if there was no damage to report. "I wouldn't have hurt her," Wiley said quietly. "I loved her. I trust you lot understand what that means." And what it implies, Lynley thought. But he didn't speak, merely waiting till Havers had completed her inspection and returned to them. It's clean, her eyes told them. Lynley could see she was disappointed. Wiley read the message. He allowed himself the pleasure of saying, "I hope that satisfies. Or do you want me on the rack as well?" "I expect you want us to do our jobs," Havers pointed out. Wiley said, "Then do them. There's a photo gone missing from Eugenie's house." "What sort of photo?" Lynley said. "The only one of the little girl alone." "Why didn't you tell us this yesterday?" "Didn't realise it. Not till this morning. She had them lined up on the kitchen table. Three rows of four. But she had thirteen pictures of those kids in the house twelve of both of them and one of the girl by herself-and unless she'd taken that one back upstairs, it's gone missing." Lynley looked at Havers. She shook her head. There had been no picture in any of the three rooms she'd looked through on the first floor of Doll Cottage. "When was the last time you saw that photo?" Lynley asked. "Whenever I was there, I saw all of them. Not like they were yesterday -in the kitchen but spread round. In the sitting room. And upstairs. On the landing. In her sewing room." "P'rhaps she'd taken that one to have a new frame," Havers said. "Or thrown it away." "She wouldn't have done," Wiley said, aghast. "Or given it away or lent it somewhere." "A picture of her daughter? Who'd she give it to, then?" It was a question, Lynley knew, that had to be answered. Once again on the pavement in Friday Street, Havers offered another possibility. "She could have posted it somewhere. To the husband, d'you think? Did he have pictures of the girl in his flat when you spoke to him, Inspector?" "None that I saw. There were only snapshots of Gideon." "There you go, then. They'd been speaking, hadn't they? About Gideon's stage fright? Why not about the little girl as well? So he asked Eugenie for a picture of her, and she sent it along. That's easy enough to find out, isn't it?" "But it's odd that he had no pictures of the daughter already, Havers." "Human nature's odd," Havers said. "This long on the force, I'd think you'd know that." Lynley couldn't argue. He said, "Let's have another look at her house to make sure the photo's not there." It was a matter of only a few minutes to double check and to prove Major Wiley right. The twelve photographs in the kitchen were all that were left in the house. Lynley and Havers were standing in the sitting room mulling this over when Lynley's mobile began to ring. It was Eric Leach phoning from the Hampstead incident room. "We've got a match," he told Lynley without preamble. He sounded pleased. "We've got the Brighton Audi and the Cell Net customer rolled into one pretty package." 'Ian Staines?" Lynley said, recalling the name connected to the Cell Net number. "Her brother?" "The same." Leach recited the address and Lynley wrote it down on the back of one of his business cards. "Get on to him," Leach said. "What've you got on Wolff?" "Nothing." Lynley reported briefly on their conversations with the Sixty Plus Club's members as well as with Major Wiley, and he went on to tell Leach of the missing photograph. The DCI offered another interpretation. "She could have brought it with her to London." "To show someone?" "That takes us back to Pitchley." "But why would she want to show him the photo? Or give it to him?" "There's more to that story than we're hearing, I say," Leach pointed out. "Dig up a picture of the Davies woman. There's got to be a snapshot somewhere in her house. Or Wiley'll have one. Take it to the Valley of Kings and the Comfort Inn. There's a chance that someone remembers her there." "With Pitchley?" "He likes them older, doesn't he?" When the police departed, Ted Wiley left Mrs. Dilday watching over the shop. It had been a slow morning and was shaping up to be a slow afternoon, so he felt no compunction about putting his engrossed customer in charge of things. It was about time that she did something to earn the privilege of reading every bestseller without ever making a purchase other than a greeting card, so he rousted her from her favourite armchair and gave her instructions on working the till. Then he went upstairs to his flat. There, he found PB snoozing in a patch of weak sunlight. He stepped over the retriever and put himself at Connie's old davenport beneath whose sloping surface he'd stowed the brochures from the forthcoming opera seasons in Vienna, Santa Fe, and Sydney. It had been his hope that one of those seasons would serve as a backdrop to his broadened relationship with Eugenie. They would travel to Austria, America, or Australia and enjoy Rossini, Verdi, or Mozart as they enriched the joy they took in each other's company and deepened the nature of their love. They'd moved slowly towards this destination for three long and careful years together, building a structure comprising tenderness, devotion, affection, and support. They'd told each other that everything else that went with a man and a woman linking themselves together most particularly sex would find its way into the equation with time. It had been a relief for Ted after Connie's death, not to mention after the esurient pursuing by other women to which he'd been exposed, to find himself in the company of a woman who wanted to build a structure first before taking up residence within it. But now after the police had left him, Ted finally forced himself to acknowledge the reality: that Eugenie's hesitation, her gentle and always kind, "I'm not ready yet, Ted," were in actuality evidence that she was not ready for him. For what else could it mean that a man had phoned and left a message rife with desperation on her answer machine? that a man had left her house at one in the morning? that a man had accosted her in the car park of the Sixty Plus Club and pleaded with her the way a man pleads when everything and most particularly his heart is at stake? There was only one answer to these questions, and Ted knew what that answer was. He'd been such a fool. Instead of being grateful for the blessed respite from sexual performance that Eugenie's reserve had promised him, he should have suspected at once that she was involved elsewhere. But he hadn't because it had been such a relief after Georgia Ramsbottom's carnal demands. She'd phoned last night. Her, "Teddy, I'm so sorry. I spoke to the police today and they said that Eugenie .. . Dearest Teddy, is there anything I can do?" had barely disguised the enthusiasm with which she'd made the call in the first place. "I'm coming over straight away," she'd said. "No ifs or buts, dear. You're not to be left alone with this." He'd not had a chance to protest and he'd not had the courage to decamp prior to her arrival. She'd swept in barely ten minutes later, bearing a baking dish in which she'd made him her speciality, which was shepherd's pie. She whipped off the aluminium foil that covered it, and he saw that the pie was depressingly perfect, with ornate little ridges like waves marking the mashed potatoes. She said, flashing a smile at him, "It's warmish, but if we pop it into the microwave, it'll be fine. You must eat, Teddy, and I know that you haven't. Have you?" She hadn't waited for an answer. She'd marched to the microwave and shut its door smartly upon the shepherd's pie, whereupon she moved briskly round the kitchen, bringing forth plates and cutlery from cupboards and drawers with the unspoken authority of a woman familiar with a man's domicile. She said, "You're devastated. I can see it in your face. I am so sorry. I know what friends you two were. And to lose such a friend as Eugenie.. . You must let yourself feel the sorrow, Teddy." Friend, he thought. Not lover. Not wife. Not companion. Not partner. Friend and everything that friend suggested. He hated Georgia Ramsbottom in that moment. He hated her not only for barging into his solitude like a ship breaking ocean ice but also for the acuity of her perception. She said without saying what he had not allowed himself even to think: His imagination and his longing had created the bond he'd believed he'd had with Eugenie. Women who were interested in a man showed their interest. They showed it soon, and they showed it unabashedly. They could do no less at an age and in a society in which they so vastly outnumbered available males. He had the proof of this in Georgia herself and in the women who had preceded Georgia in his widowed years. They had their knickers off before a man could reassuringly say to them, "I'm no Jack the lad." And if they kept their knickers on, it was only because their hands were busy in his crotch instead. But Eugenie had done none of that, had she? Demure Eugenie. Docile Eugenie. Damned Eugenie. He'd felt such a swelling of anger that he couldn't reply at first to Georgia's comments. He wanted to pound his fist into something hard. He wanted to break it. Georgia took his silence for stoicism, the stiff upper lip that was the proud achievement of every upstanding British male. She said, "I know, I know. And it's ghastly, isn't it? The older we get, the more we have to bear witness to our friends' passing. But what I've discovered is the importance of nurturing the precious friendships that are left to us. So you mustn't cut yourself off from those of us who care deeply about you, Teddy. We won't have that." She'd reached across the table and placed on his arm her hand with its encrustation of rings. He'd thought fleetingly of Eugenie's hands and the contrast they made to this red-tipped snatcher. Her hands had been ring less with the nails clipped short and slivers of moon showing at their bases. "Don't turn away, Teddy," Georgia had said and her hand had tightened upon him. "From any of us. We're here to help you through this. We care for you. Truly and deeply. You'll see." Her own brief unhappy past with Ted might not have existed. His failure and the contempt she'd felt being a witness to his failure were banished to a foreign land. The intervening man less years she'd lived through had obviously instructed her in what was important and what was not. She was a changed woman, as he would see once she wormed her way into his life again. Ted read it all in her gesture and in her tender smile. Bile rose in his throat, and his body burned. He needed air. He rose abruptly. He said, "That old dog," and called out roughly, "PB? Where've you taken yourself off to? Come." And to Georgia, "Sorry. I was about to take the dog for her final nightly when you phoned." He'd made his escape that way, without inviting Georgia to accompany him and giving her no chance to make the suggestion herself. He called out once again, "PB? Come, girl. Time for a walk," and he was gone before Georgia had the chance to regroup. He knew that she'd assume from his departure that she'd moved too quickly. He also knew that she wouldn't assume anything else. And that was important, Ted realised suddenly. That was crucial: to limit the woman's knowledge about him. He'd walked rapidly, feeling it all again. Stupid, he told himself, stupid and blind. Hanging about like a schoolboy hoping for a go with the local tart, not seeing her as a tart at all because he was too young, too inexperienced, too eager, too .. . too limp. That's what it was, all right. Too limp. He'd charged towards the river, dragging the poor dog behind him. He needed to put distance between himself and Georgia, and he wanted to be away from the flat long enough to ensure her departure in his absence. Even Georgia Ramsbottom would not throw all her chances away by playing her trump cards the first evening. She would leave his flat; she would retire for a few days. Then, when she thought that he'd recovered from their initial skirmish, she would be back, offering a renewal of her sympathetic attention. Ted was certain he could depend upon that. At the corner of Friday Street and the river, he'd turned left. He strode on the town side of the Thames. The lights along the street pooled buttermilk onto the pavement intermittently and the wind blew a heavy mist in sharp waves that felt as if they rose from the river itself. Ted turned up the collar of his waxed jacket and said, "Come on, girl," to the dog who was looking longingly at a sapling planted nearby, possibly with the hope of snoozing a while underneath it. "PB. Come." A jerk on the choke chain did it, as usual. They hurried on. They were in the churchyard before Ted really thought about it. They were in the churchyard before he recalled the vision he'd had there on the night Eugenie died. PB made for the grass like a horse to its stall before Ted actually knew she was doing so. She squatted wearily and let forth her stream before he had the chance to urge her somewhere else. Without intending, without thinking, without even considering what the action implied, Ted felt his eyes drift from the dog to the almshouses at the far end of the path. He'd just take a quick glance that way, he told himself, in order to see that the woman who lived in the third house from the right had her curtains closed. If she hadn't and if a light was burning, he'd do her a service and let her know that any stranger passing by could look right in and .. . well, assess her valuables for a burglary. The light was on. Time to do his good deed for the day. Ted pulled PB away from the tipped gravestone round which she was sniffing and urged her as quickly as he could along the path. It was essential that he get to the almshouse before the woman within it did anything that could embarrass them both. Because if she began to undress as she had the other night, he could hardly knock on her door, caution her about her indiscretion, and thereby admit to having watched her, could he? "Hurry, PB," he said to the dog. "Come along." He was just fifteen seconds too late. Five yards from the almshouse and she had begun. And she was quick about it, so very quick that before he had time to avert his eyes, she'd whisked her jersey off, shaken back her hair, and removed her brassiere. She bent to something was it her shoes? her stockings? her trousers? what? and her breasts hung heavily downward. Ted swallowed. He thought two words Dear God and he felt the first throb of his body's answer to the sight before him. He'd watched her once, he'd stood here once, he'd traced with his eyes those sumptuous full curves. But he couldn't couldn' tallow himself the guilty pleasure of doing so again. She had to be told. She had to be warned. She had to ... had to know? he wondered. What woman didn't know? What woman had never learned about caution and nighttime windows? What woman threw her clothes off at night in a room fully lit without curtains or blinds without knowing that someone on the other side of those few millimeters of glass was probably watching, longing, fantasising, hardening .. . She knew, Ted realised. She knew. So he'd watched the unknown woman in that almshouse bedroom a second night. He'd stayed longer this time, mesmerised by the sight of her smoothing lotion on her neck and her arms. He heard himself moan like a pre-adolescent having his first glimpse at Playboy when she used that same lotion on her succulent breasts. There in the churchyard, he'd had a surreptitious wank. Beneath his waxed jacket as the rain began to fall, he worked his cock like a man pumping spray onto garden insects. He got about as much satisfaction from the resulting orgasm as one would get from using a garden sprayer and in the aftermath of his release what he felt wasn't exultation. It was bitter shame. He felt it again now in his sitting room, wave after wave of black humiliation, building and cresting as he sat at Connie's old davenport. He looked at the glossy photo of the Sydney Opera House, moved from it to a picture of the outdoor theatre in Santa Fe where The Marriage of Figaro was sung under the stars, set that to one side and picked up a picture of a narrow antique street in Vienna. He stared at this last with a darkness of spirit enveloping him and hearing within him a voice that he recognised as the voice of his mother hovering over him so many years in the past, so eager to judge, even more eager to condemn, if not him then someone else: "What a waste of time, Teddy. Don't be such a little fool." But he was, wasn't he? He'd spent so many good hours imagining himself and Eugenie in one location or another, like actors moving on a strip of celluloid that did not allow for a single blemish in either the moment or the individuals. In his mind's eye, there had been no harsh glare of sunlight upon skin that was ageing, no hair out of place, on either of their heads, no breath needing freshening, no sphincter tightening to prevent an embarrassing explosion of intestinal wind at an inopportune time, no thickened toenails, no sagging flesh, and most of all no failure on his part when the time was finally right. He'd pictured the two of them eternally young in each other's vision if not in the world's. And that was all that had mattered to Ted: the way they saw each other. But for Eugenie, things had been different. He understood that now. Because it wasn't natural for a woman to keep a man at a distance for so many months that bled inexorably into so many years. It also wasn't fair. She'd used him as a front, he concluded. There was no other explanation for the phone calls she'd received, the visits to her house, and her inexplicable trip to London. She was using him as a front because if their mutual friends and acquaintances in Henley not to mention the board of directors at the Sixty Plus Club who employed her believed that she was keeping chaste company with Major Ted Wiley, they'd be far less likely to speculate that she was keeping unchaste company with someone else. Fool. Fool. Don't be such a little fool Once burnt, twice shy. I'd've thought you'd know better. But how did one ever know better? To hope for that sort of foresight meant never to venture forward at all into the company of another, and Ted didn't want that. His marriage to Connie happy and fulfilling for so many years had made him over sanguine. His marriage to Connie had taught him to believe that such a union was possible again, not a rare thing at all but something to be worked for and if not easily achieved, then achieved through an effort that was based on love. Lies, he thought. Every one of them lies. Lies he'd told to himself and lies that he'd willingly believed as Eugenie had said them. I'm not ready yet, Ted. But the reality was that Eugenie hadn't been ready for him. The sense of betrayal he felt was like an illness coming upon him. It started in his head and began to work oozingly downward. It seemed to him that the only way to defeat it was to beat it from his body, and if he'd had a scourge, he would have used it upon himself and taken satisfaction from the pain. As it was, he had only the brochures on the davenport, those pathetic symbols of his puerile idiocy. He felt them slick beneath his hand, and his fingers crumpled them first then tore them. His chest bore a weight that might have been his arteries slowly closing but was, he knew, merely the dying of something other and far more necessary to his being than simply his old man's heart. Chapter Twelve Entering the shop on the heels of the black constable was Akisha Newland, whose timely arrival gave Yasmin Edwards an opportunity that she would not otherwise have had of ignoring the man altogether. The girl politely hung back, apparently assuming that the man had come on business and was therefore to be given priority. All the Newland kids were like that, well brought up and thoughtful: a rare quality in teenagers. Yasmin said, "How's your Mum today?" to the girl, avoiding eye contact with the constable. Akisha said, "Doin' fair so far. She had a round of chemo two days back, but she's not taking it's bad as she did the last time. Don't know what that means, but we're hoping the best. You know." The best would be five more years of life, which was all the doctors had promised Mrs. Newland when they'd first found the tumour in her brain. She could go without treatment and she'd live eighteen months, they'd told her. With treatment she might have five years. But that would be the maximum, barring some miracle, and miracles were in short supply when it came to cancer. Yasmin wondered what it would be like to have seven children to raise with a death sentence hanging over one's head. She fetched Mrs. Newland's wig from the back of the shop and brought it out on its Styrofoam stand. Akisha said, "That doesn't look like ' Yasmin interrupted. "It's a new one. I think she's going t' like the style. You ask if. She doesn't, you bring it back and we'll do the original for her. Right?" Akisha's dark face gleamed with pleasure. "That's real nice of you, Mrs. Edwards," she said as she scooped the wig stand under her arm. "Thanks. Mum'll have a surprise this way." She was out in the street, with a bob of her head towards the constable, before Yasmin could do anything to prolong the conversation. When the door shut behind her, Yasmin looked at the man. She found that she couldn't remember his name, which was a delight to her. She looked round for further employment in the shop, the better to continue ignoring him. Perhaps it was time to catalogue any supplies she now needed in her make-up case after having worked on those six women earlier. She brought the case out again, flipped the catches open, and began sorting through lotions, brushes, sponges, eye colour, lip colour, foundation, blushers, mascaras, and pencils. She laid each item on the counter. The constable said, "Could I have a word, Missus Edwards?" "You had a word last night. More 'an one, as I recall. And who are you, anyway?" "Metropolitan police." "I mean your name. I don't know your name." He told her. She found that she was irritated by it. A surname that spoke of his roots was fine. But that Christian name Winston -displayed such a grovelling wish to be English. It was worse than Colin or Nigel or Giles. What were his parents thinking of, naming him Winston like he was going to be a politician or something? Stupid, that was. Stupid, he was. She said, "I'm working, as I expect you c'n see. I got another appointment coming in in She made a pretence of looking at her diary which was, thankfully, out of his range of vision 'ten minutes. What d'you want, then? Make it quick." He was big, she noticed. He'd looked big last night, both in the lift and in the flat. But somehow he looked even bigger today in the shop, perhaps because she was alone with him, with no Daniel there to offer a distraction. He seemed to fill the place, all broad shoulders and long-fingered hands and a face that looked friendly pretended to be friendly because that's what they all did even with that scar on his cheek. "Like I said, a word, Missus Edwards." His voice was scrupulously polite. He kept his distance, the shop counter between them. But instead of going on with the word he wanted, he said, "Real nice that a new business opened up on a street like this. Always sad, you ask me, to see shop fronts boarded up. It's good to have a business go in, 'stead of some bloke buying up all the properties, bringing in a demolition crew, and putting up a Tescos or something like." She gave a mild snort. "Rent's cheap when you're willing to set up shop in a rubbish tip," she said, as if it meant nothing to her that she'd managed to actually achieve something she'd only dreamed of during her years in prison. Nkata half-smiled. "I 'xpect that's the truth. But the neighbours must feel it a blessing. Gives them hope. What sort of work you do in here, then?" It was more than obvious what sort of work she did. Yasmin didn't trust the question for a second. There were wigs on Styrofoam heads along one wall and a work room in the back where she styled them. He could see both the wigs and the work room from where he stood, so his question was maddening. It was such a blatant attempt to be friendly where friendliness between herself and someone like him was not only impossible but dangerous. Thus, she offered him her scorn, saying, "What you doing a plod?" with a contemptuous glance that took him in from head to toe. He shrugged. "It's a living." "At brothers' expense." "Only if that's how it plays out." He sounded as if he'd resolved the matter of possibly having to arrest one of his own a long time ago. That angered her so she jerked her head at his face, saying, "Where'd you get that, then?" as if the cicatrix that formed a curve on his cheek was his just reward for abandoning his people. "Knife fight," he said. "Met some blokes in Windmill Gardens when I was fifteen and full of myself. I was lucky." "And I s'pose the other bloke wasn't?" He fingered the scar as if trying to remember. He said, "Depends on how you think luck works." She blew derision from her nostrils and went back to her make-up sorting. She arranged her eye shadows by colour, twisted tubes of lipstick open and did the same to them, flipped open the blushers and powders, and checked the levels on the liquid foundations. She made much of taking notes, writing on an order pad and being so extra scrupulous about her spelling that the lives of her customers might have depended upon the accuracy of her order form. "I was in a gang, see," Nkata offered. "I got out after that fight. Mostly 'cause of my mum. She took a look at my face when they took me to casualty and dropped to the floor like a stone. Gave herself concussion and ended up in hospital. That was that." "So you love your mum." What rubbish, she thought. "Know better than not to," he replied. She looked up quickly and saw he was smiling, but it seemed directed at himself not at her. He said, "You got a real nice boy." "You stay away from my Daniel!" Her panic surprised her. "He miss his dad?" "I said you stay away!" Nkata came to the counter then. He laid down his hands. He seemed to imply by the action that he was weaponless, but Yasmin knew otherwise. Coppers always had weapons and they knew how to use them. Nkata did so now. He said, "There's a woman died two nights ago, Missus Edwards. Up in Hampstead. She had a boy, too." "What's that to me?" "She was run down. Three times run over by the same car." "I don't know no one in Hampstead. I don't go to Hampstead. I never been to Hampstead. I go there, I stick out like a cactus in Siberia." "You would, that." She looked at him sharply to catch the sarcasm in his face that she couldn't hear in his voice, but all she saw was a gentleness in his eyes, and she knew exactly what that gentleness meant. It was a gentleness manufactured for the moment that said he'd do her right here in the shop if he could talk her into it, he'd do her if he could get away with it, he'd do her even if he had to scare her into doing it with him, because to do it would prove he had the power to, because she was simply there, like a particularly challenging but nonetheless potentially gratifying mountain he just had to climb. She said, "I hear coppers work different to this, I do." "What's that?" he asked, managing quite effectively to look perplexed. "You know what's that. You went to cop school, didn't you? Plods look for lags who're falling back on what they know best. They don't dig in new ground if they don't have to because they know that's a waste of time." "I'm not wasting time, far's I see. And I got a feeling you know that, Missus Edwards." "I knifed Roger Edwards. I cut him up good. I didn't run him down with a car. Didn't even have a car back then, Roger and me. Sold it, we did, when the money ran out and his little habit needed an urgent seeing to." "I'm real sorry about that," the constable said. "Must've been a bad time for you." "You try five years locked up if you want a bad time." She turned from him and went on taking her inventory of cosmetics. He said, "Missus Edwards, you know it's not you I'm here about." "I don't know nothing like that, Mr. Constable. But you can leave easy enough, I 'xpect, if it's not me you're wanting to talk to. I'm the only one here and the only one who's going to be here till my next client comes in. Course you might want to have a word with her. She's got cancer in her ovaries but she's a real nice lady, and I expect she'll tell you last time she drove up to Hampstead. That's why you're in this part of town, right? Some black lady was driving in Hampstead and the neighbourhood's all in an uproar about it and you're here trying to suss her out?" "You know that's not the fact 's well." He sounded infinitely patient and Yasmin wondered how far she could push him before he snapped. She gave him her back. She had no intention of offering him anything, least of all what he apparently was after. He said, "What happened to your boy when you were inside, Missus Edwards?" She swung round so fast that the beads on the ends of her plaits struck her cheeks. "Don't you talk about him! Don't you try rattling me with Daniel. I didn't do nothing to anyone anywhere and you bloody well know it." "I 'xpect that's the truth. But what's also the truth is that Katja Wolff knew this lady, Missus Edwards. This lady that got mashed over up in Hampstead. This was two nights back, Missus Edwards, and Katja Wolff used to work for her. Twenty years ago. Back in Kensington Square. She was nanny to her baby. You know the lady I'm talking about?" Yasmin felt the panic like a swarm of bees attacking her face. She cried out, "You saw the car. Last night you saw it. You could tell it wasn't in no accident." "What I could tell is it had a front headlamp that was broke, with no one able to say how it happened." "Katja didn't run down no one! No one, you hear? You saying that Katja could run down a lady and only have a headlamp get broke?" He didn't reply, merely letting her question and all that her question implied sing in the silence between them. She saw her mistake. He hadn't directly said that Katja was the person he was looking for. It was Yasmin herself who'd led them to that point. She was furious with herself for letting panic get the better of her. She went back to the make-up she'd been cataloguing, and she began to slam each article back into the large metal case. Nkata said, "I don't think she was home, Missus Edwards. Not when this lady was run down. Happened sometime between ten and midnight. And I think Katja Wolff was gone from your flat just about that time. Maybe she was out for two hours, maybe three or four. Maybe she was gone for the night. But she wasn't there, was she? And neither was the car." She wouldn't answer. She wouldn't meet his eyes. She wouldn't acknowledge he was in the shop. Just a counter separated them, so she could almost feel his breath. But she would not allow his presence -or his words to gain access to her in any way. Still, her heart was slamming against her ribs, and her mind was filled with the image of Katja's face. It was a face that had observed her carefully during suicide watch when she first went inside, a face that studied her through their exercise period and through association later in the day, a face that locked on hers during tea, and ultimately though she never would have thought it, expected it, or dreamed that she could have wanted it a face that lingered above hers in the darkness. Tell me your secrets. I'll tell you mine. She knew what had taken Katja inside. Everyone knew though Katja herself had never spoken of it to Yasmin. Whatever had happened in Kensington was not one of the secrets that Katja Wolff had been willing to reveal, and the single time that Yasmin had asked about the crime for which Katja was so much hated that she'd had to guard herself for years from retribution from the other women, Katja had said, "Do you think I would kill a child, Yasmin? Very well. So be it." And she had turned from Yasmin and had left her alone. People didn't understand what it was like to be inside, to face the choice between solitude and companionship, between running the risks that went with solitude and embracing the protection that came with choosing or allowing oneself to be chosen as a lover, a partner, and a companion. To be alone was to be imprisoned within the prison, and the desolation that went with that secondary gaol term could break a woman and leave her fit for nothing when she was finally released. So she'd put aside doubts and embraced the story that Katja's words had implied. Katja Wolff was no killer of babies. Katja Wolff was no killer at all. "Missus Edwards," Constable Nkata said in that gentle, trustworthy voice that coppers always used till they saw it wasn't working like they wanted, "I see the situation you're in. You been together with her for a while. You got loyalty to her from when you were locked up and loyalty's good. But when someone's dead and someone else is lyin' ' "What do you know 'bout loyalty?" she cried out, swinging round on him. "What do you know 'bout anything, man? You stand there like you think you're God 'cause you made a lucky choice that took you a different route to the rest of us. But you don't know nothing 'bout life, do you? "Cause your choices always keep you safe but they got nothing in them that make you alive." He observed her calmly, and it seemed that there was nothing she could do and nothing she could say to shatter that steady tranquillity of his. And she hated him for the calm front he presented because she knew without having to be told that his serenity went right to the core of who he was. "Katja was home," she snapped. "Just like we said. Now get out of here. I got work to do." He said, "Where d'you 'xpect she went those days she phoned in to the laundry ill, Missus Edwards?" "She didn't phone in to the laundry. She didn't phone in ill or anything else." "She told you that?" "She didn't need to tell me." "You best ask her, then. You best watch her eyes when she answers, too. They fix on you, she's probably lying. They don't look at you at all, she's probably lying as well. "Course, after twenty years inside, she'll be good at lying. So if she carries on with what she's doing when you ask your question, there's a good enough chance that she's lying as well." "I asked you to get out," Yasmin said. "I don't 'tend to ask again." "Missus Edwards, you're at risk in this situation, but you're not th' only one and you got to know that. You got a boy at risk. You got a fine boy. Clever and good. I c'n see he loves you 'bove everything on earth, and if anything takes you 'way from him again ' "Get out!" she cried. "Get out if my shop. If you don't get out right now, I'll.. ." What? What, she thought raggedly. What in God's name would she do? Knife him like she'd knifed her husband? Assault him? And then what would they do to her? And to Daniel? What would happen to him? If they took her son from her put him into care for even a day while they sorted things out the way they always did their sorting she would not be able to bear the burden of responsibility for his pain and confusion. She lowered her head. She would not give the detective her face. He could see her harsh breathing, he could take note of the beads of sweat that glistened on her neck. But more than that she would not give him. Not for the world, not for her freedom, not for anything else. Into her line of vision, she suddenly saw his dark hand slide across the counter. She flinched till she realised he didn't mean to touch her. Instead he passed her a business card, then slid his hand away. He said so quietly that it sounded like a prayer, "You phone me, Missus Edwards. There's my pager number on that card, so you phone me. Day or night. You phone. When you're ready ' "I got nothing more to say." But she whispered the words because it hurt her throat too much to do more than that. "When you're ready," he repeated. "Missus Edwards." She didn't look up but she didn't need to. His heels sounded sharply against the yellow lino on the floor as he left the shop. After she and Lynley went their separate ways, Barbara Havers visited the Valley of Kings first. It was filled with swarthy middle eastern waiters. Once they appeared to come to terms with their collective disapproval of a woman wearing mufti instead of a black bed sheet, they studied in turn the snapshot of Eugenie Davies that Barbara and Lynley had managed to unearth from the woman's cottage in Friday Street. She had posed with Ted Wiley on the bridge that served as the gateway to Henley-on-Thames, and the picture had been taken during the Regatta, if the banners, boats, and colour fully dressed crowds along the river in the background were anything to go by. Barbara had carefully folded the photograph to exclude Major Wiley from the composition. No need to muddy the waters of the waiters' memories by showing Eugenie Davies with someone whom the employees of the Valley of Kings might never have seen. But they shook their heads anyway, one by one. The woman in the photo wasn't anyone that they remembered. She would have been with a man, Barbara told them helpfully. They would have come in separately but with the intention of meeting each other there, possibly in the bar. They would have seemed interested in each other, interested in a way that leads to sex. Two of the waiters looked scandalised at this fascinating twist in the information. Another's expression of disgust said that mutual lust played out in public between a man and a woman was just what he'd come to expect from living in the UK's answer to Gomorrah. But the clarification that Barbara had sought to provide through her revelation gained her nothing. Soon enough she was back in the street, and plodding in the direction of the Comfort Inn. It wasn't, she found, aptly named, but then what affordable hotel in a busy street in their nation's capital ever was? She flashed Eugenie Davies' picture there for the desk clerk, the maids, and everyone else having contact with the hotel's residents but she received the same result. The night clerk, however, who would have been the person to see the pictured lady most closely had she ever checked into the hotel with a lover after dining at the Valley of Kings, was not yet on duty, Barbara was told by the hotel manager. So if the constable wanted to return .. . ? She would have to, Barbara decided. There was no point leaving any stone right side up. She fetched her car from where she'd left it, illegally parked in front of a cobbled pedestrian path leading into aleafy neighbourhood. She sat inside, shook a fag from her packet of Players, and lit up, cracking open a window against the chill autumn air. She smoked thoughtfully and considered two topics: the lack of damage on Ted Wiley's car and everyone's failure to identify Eugenie Davies in this South Kensington neighbourhood. On the subject of Wiley's car, the conclusion seemed obvious: Whatever Barbara's earlier thinking in the matter, Ted Wiley hadn't run down the woman he loved. On the subject of everyone's failure to identify Eugenie Davies, however, matters were less defined. One possible conclusion was that Eugenie had no connection with J. W. Pitchley, aka James Pitchford, in the present day despite having had a connection to him in the past and despite the coincidence of her having his address in her possession and dying in the very street where he lived. Another possible conclusion was that a connection did exist between them, but that connection did not extend to a tryst at the Valley of Kings or a bout of mattress bouncing afterwards at the Comfort Inn. A third conclusion was that they'd been longtime lovers who'd been meeting elsewhere prior to the night in question when they were to meet at Pitchley-Pitchford's place, which explained why Eugenie Davies had his address with her. And a fourth conclusion was that, sheer coincidence though it might be, Eugenie Davies had connected through the internet with Tongue Man -Barbara shuddered at the name and had met him like all his other lovers at the Valley of Kings for drinks and dinner, trailing him home afterwards and returning on another night to have some sort of encounter with him. The fact of those other lovers seemed to be the point, though. If Pitchley-Pitchford was a regular at the restaurant and the hotel, then someone was going to remember his face, if not Eugenie's. So there was a chance that seeing his face next to Eugenie's face would dislodge a memory helpful to the investigation. Thus, Barbara knew that she needed a photo of Pitchley-Pitchford. And there was only one way to get it. She made the drive to Crediton Hill in forty-five minutes, wishing not for the first time that she had the talents of a taxi driver who'd passed the Knowledge with highest honours. There wasn't a single parking space in the street when she got there, but the houses had driveways, so Barbara made use of Pitchley's. It was a decent neighbourhood, she saw, lined with houses of a size that suggested no one in this part of the world was hurting for lolly. The area was not yet as trendy as Hampstead itself -with its coffee bars, narrow streets, and bohemian atmosphere but it was pleasant, a good place for families with children and an unexpected place for a murder. When she got out of her car, Barbara glanced up and saw a flicker of movement in Pitchley's front window. She rang the bell. There was no immediate answer, which she considered odd since the room in which she'd seen the movement was no great distance from the front door. She rang a second time and heard a man call out, "Coming, coming," and a moment later, the door swung open on a bloke who did not appear at all like the online Lothario Barbara had been imagining. She'd expected someone vaguely oleaginous, decidedly tight-trousered, blatantly open-shirted, and displaying a gold medallion like a prize to be disentangled from the snare of copious hairs on his chest. Instead what she saw in front of her was a grey-eyed whippet of a man, well under six feet tall, possessing rounded cheeks splashed with the sort of natural colour that would have been the bane of his youth. He was wearing blue jeans and a striped cotton shirt with a button-down collar, and this latter garment was closed to the throat. A pair of glasses was tucked into his shirt pocket. He wore expensive looking slip-ons on his feet. So much for preconceived notions, Barbara thought. It was obviously time to elevate her leisure reading because cheap romance novels were polluting her mind. She drew out her warrant card and identified herself. "C'n I have a word?" she asked. Pitchley's response was immediate as he half-shut the door. "Not without my solicitor present." Barbara put out her hand and stopped the door's progress. "Look. I need a photo of you, Mr. Pitchley. If you have no connection with Eugenie Davies, it's no skin off your arse to hand one over." "I've just said ' "I heard. And what I say is this: I can go through the legal song and dance with everyone from your solicitor to the Lord Chancellor to get the picture I need, but it seems to me that that's not only going to prolong your problems but it's also going to make great entertainment for your neighbours when I show up in a panda with the police photographer. With siren blaring and lights flashing on the roof to get the proper effect, of course." "You wouldn't dare." "Try me," she said. He thought about it, his glance darting along the street. "I said I hadn't seen her in years. I didn't even recognise her when I saw her body. Why won't you lot believe me? I'm telling the truth." "Fine. Brilliant. Then let me prove it to everyone interested. I don't know about the rest of the force, but I'm not keen to stick this murder onto someone with no direct claim on the territory." He shifted from foot to foot like a schoolboy. He still held onto the door with one hand and his other hand now moved up to grasp the jamb. It was an interesting reaction, Barbara thought. Despite what she'd said to reassure him, he was responding like a man who was barring the entry. He was acting like a man with something to hide. Barbara wanted to know what that something was. She said, "Mr. Pitchley.. . ? The photo .. . ?" He said, "Very well. I'll fetch one. If you'll wait ' Barbara shouldered her way inside the house, unwilling to give him the chance to add here or on the step, with or without a courteous please attached. She said heartily, "Thanks very much. Decent of you. I could do with a few minutes out of the cold." His nostrils flared with his displeasure, but he said, "Fine. Wait here. I'll be just a moment," and he fairly threw himself up the stairs. Barbara listened hard to his progress. She listened hard to the sounds in the house. He'd admitted to trolling for older ladies on the net, but there was always the chance that he did some trolling where the younger fishies swam as well. If that was the case and if he had the same degree of success with teenagers that he had with the others, he wouldn't risk taking one of them to the Comfort Inn. Any bloke who made I-want-my-solicitor his primary response to any interaction with the police was a bloke who knew his arse from his elbow when it came to doing the deed with an underage girl. If he was bent in that direction, he'd make sure he didn't take the risk in public, but at home. The fact that she'd seen movement in the room just above the street upon her arrival suggested to Barbara that whatever Pitchley was up to, he was up to it on this floor of the house. So she sauntered to a closed door on her right as Pitchley thrashed about somewhere above her. She swung the door open and found herself in an orderly sitting room furnished with antiques. The only item that appeared out of place was a tattered waxed jacket that lay over a chair. It seemed an odd place for the neat-as-pins Pitchley to stow a garment of his own. He had that sort of everything-in-its-place look about him. Barbara took a peek at the jacket, then more than a peek. She lifted it off the chair and held it out at arm's length. Bingo, she thought. Pitchley would have been dwarfed inside it. But so would a teenage girl. Or any woman, for that matter, who wasn't the size of a sumo wrestler. She replaced the jacket as Pitchley pounded down the stairs and plunged into the sitting room. He said, "I asked you and stopped when he saw her smoothing down the garment's collar. At this, his eyes shifted to a second door in the room, which remained closed. Then they came back to Barbara, and he thrust his hand out. "This is what you want. The woman's a colleague, by the way." Barbara said, "Thanks," and took the picture he offered. He'd chosen something flattering, she saw. In it, Pitchley wore black tie and he posed with a stunning brunette on his arm. She wore a sea green form-fitting gown from which balloon-like bosoms threatened to spill. They were patently implants, rising abruptly from her chest like twin domes designed by Sir Christopher Wren. "Nice looking lady," Barbara said. "American, I take it." Pitchley looked surprised. "Yes. From Los Angeles. How did you guess?" "Elementary deduction," Barbara said. She stowed the photo away. She went on pleasantly. "Nice digs. You live here alone?" His eyes flicked to the jacket. But he said, "Yes." "All this space. You're lucky. I've a place in Chalk Farm. But it's nothing like this. Just a hedgehog hole." She indicated the second door. "What's through there?" His tongue lapped against his lips. "The dining room. Constable, if there's nothing else .. ." "Mind if I have a peek? It's always a treat to see how the other half lives." "Yes. I do. I mean, see here. You've got what you came for, and I see no need ' "I think you're hiding something, Mr. Pitchley." He flushed to the roots of his hair. "I'm not." "No? That's good, then. So I'll have a look at what's behind this door." She swung it open before he could protest further. He said, "I haven't given you permission," as she stepped into the next room. It was empty, with stylish curtains at the far end drawn back against French windows. As in the sitting room, every article was in its place. Also as in the sitting room, however, one item struck a dissonant note. A cheque book sat on the walnut table. It was open, face down, and a pen lay next to it. "Paying bills?" Barbara said idly. She took note that the air was tinctured heavily with the scent of male body odour as she advanced on the table. "I'd like you to leave now, Constable." Pitchley made a move towards the table but Barbara had the advantage of getting there first. She picked up the cheque book. Pitchley said hotly, "Hang on. How dare you? You have no right to invade my home." "Hmm. Yes," Barbara said. She read the cheque that had gone uncompleted, Pitchley's writing no doubt interrupted by her ringing on his front bell. The amount in question was three thousand pounds. The payee was Robert, and the missing surname marked the moment of Barbara's arrival. "That's it," Pitchley said. "I've cooperated with you. Leave or I'll phone my solicitor." "Who's Robert?" she asked. "Is that his jacket out there and his aftershave in here?" In reply, Pitchley headed for a swinging door. He said over his shoulder, "I've finished with your questions." But Barbara wasn't finished with him. She was hot on his heels into the kitchen. He said, "Keep out of here." "Why?" A gust of cold air answered her as she entered. She saw that the window was open wide. From the garden beyond it, a clatter sounded. Barbara dashed to investigate while Pitchley dived for the phone. As he punched in numbers behind her, Barbara saw the source of the noise outside. A rake that had been leaning against the house near the kitchen window had been knocked over onto the flagstones. And the visitors to Pitchley's home who had done the knocking over were at that moment slip-sliding down a narrow slope that separated the garden from a park behind it. "Stop right there, you two," Barbara shouted at the men. They were burly and badly dressed in crusty looking blue jeans and muddy boots. One of them had on aleather bomber jacket. The other wore only a pullover against the cold. Both flashed looks back over their shoulders when they heard Barbara's shout. Pullover grinned and gave her an insolent salute. Bomber Jacket shouted, "Go for it, Jay," and both laughed as they slipped in the mud, scrambled back to their feet, and took off at a run across the park. Barbara said, "Damn," and turned back to the kitchen. Pitchley had his solicitor on the line. He was babbling, "I want you over here now. I swear, Azoff, if you're not at the house in the next ten minutes ' Barbara strode to where he stood and snatched the phone from his hand. He said, "You bloody little ' "Take a stress pill, Pitchley," Barbara said. She said into the phone, "Save yourself the trip, Mr. Azoff. I'm leaving. I have what I need," and without waiting to hear the solicitor's reply, she handed the phone back to Pitchley. She said, "I don't know what you're up to, fast man, but I'm going to find out. And when I do, I'll be back with a warrant and a team to tear this house to shreds. If we find anything that connects you to Eugenie Davies, you're meat on a skewer. My skewer. Got it?" "I have no connection with Eugenie Davies," he said stiffly although some of the colour was gone from his cheeks and the rest of his face had gone nearly white, 'other than what I've already told Chief Inspector Leach." "Fine," she said. "So be it, Mr. Pitchley. You'd best hope that's what my spade work turns up." She strode from the kitchen and made her way to the front door. Once outside, she went straight to her car. There was no point to trying to track down the two blokes; by the time she worked her way round West Hampstead over to the other side of the park, they'd be either long gone or well in hiding. Barbara fired up the Mini's engine and revved it a few times to let off steam. She'd been ready to go through the motions of taking Pitchley's photo and Eugenie Davies' photo back to the Valley of Kings and the Comfort Inn without the hope of gaining anything from the exercise. Indeed, she'd been nearly ready to dismiss J.W. Pitchley, aka James Pitchford, aka Tongue Man from their list of suspects altogether. But now she wondered. He sure as hell wasn't acting like a man with nothing smelly on his conscience. He was acting like a man up to his neck in manure. And with a cheque for three thousand pounds half-written in his dining room and two gorilla size yobbos climbing out of his kitchen window .. . Things no longer looked so cut and dried for Pitchley, Pitchford, Tongue Man or whoever the hell he was supposed to be. Barbara reflected on this final idea as she reversed the Mini into the street. Pitchley, Pitchford, and Tongue Man she thought. There was something in that. She wondered idly if there was another name somewhere that the man from West Hampstead used for something. She knew exactly how to suss that out. Lynley found the home of Ian Staines in a quiet street not far from St. Ann's Well Gardens. Using the motor ways he'd made the drive down to Brighton from Henley-on-Thames in fairly good time, but the brief daylight of November was fast fading when he pulled up to the correct address. The door was opened by a woman holding a cat as if it were an infant against her shoulder. The cat was Persian, an insolent looking pedigree who cast baleful blue eyes upon Lynley as he produced his identification. The woman was a striking Eurasian, no longer young and no longer as beautiful as she once might have been, but difficult to look away from all the same because of a subtle hardness beneath her skin. She took note of Lynley's identification and said, "Yes," and nothing more when he asked her if she was Mrs. Ian Staines. She waited for whatever was forthcoming from him, although a certain narrowing to her eyes suggested to Lynley that she had little doubt about who the subject of this visit was. He asked if he could have a word, and she stepped back from the doorway and led him to a partially furnished sitting room. Noting the deep impression of furniture feet left on the carpet, he asked if the Staineses were moving house. She said no, they were not moving house, and after the most minute of pauses, she added yet in such a way that Lynley felt the undercurrent of her contempt. She didn't gesture him to one of the two remaining chairs in the sparsely furnished room, both of which were currently occupied with one cat apiece of the same breed as the feline she held. Neither of these was sleeping as one might expect of a cat perched on a comfortable chair. Rather, they were watchful, as if Lynley were a specimen of something in which they might become interested should a sudden burst of energy come upon them. Mrs. Staines set the cat she held onto the floor. Bloomer-legged by fur that shone with careful grooming, he sauntered to one of the chairs, leapt effortlessly to its seat and dispossessed his housemate of it. That cat joined the other and settled down on its haunches. "They're beautiful animals," Lynley said. "Are you a breeder, Mrs. Staines?" She didn't reply. She wasn't very different from the cats themselves: observing, withholding, and palpably hostile. She walked to a table that stood by itself, next to the carpet impressions of what must have been a sofa. The table held nothing but a tortoiseshell box whose lid Mrs. Staines flipped open with one manicured finger. She took a cigarette out and from the pocket of her slender-legged trousers, she scooped up a lighter. She put flame to tobacco, inhaled, and said, "What's he done?" in the tone of a woman who very much wanted to add this time to the question. There were no newspapers in the room. But their absence didn't mean that the Staineses were unaware of Eugenie Davies' death. Lynley said, "There's a situation in London that I'd like to speak to your husband about, Mrs. Staines. Is he at home or still at work?" "At work?" She gave a short, breathy laugh before saying, "London, is it? Ian doesn't like cities, Inspector. He can barely cope with the congestion in Brighton." "The traffic?" Lynley asked. "The people. Misanthropy is one of his less admirable qualities, although he manages to hide it most of the time." She inhaled from her cigarette in the studied manner of an old film star, her head tilted back so that her hair thick, stylishly cut, with the occasional strand of grey highlighting it hung free from her shoulders. She walked to the window in front of which were yet more carpet impressions of furniture now removed. She said, "He wasn't here when she died. He'd gone to see her. They'd had a row as you must have been told by someone or why else would you have come. But he didn't kill her." "You've heard about what happened to Mrs. Davies, then." "Daily Mail," she said. "We didn't know about it until this morning." "Someone was seen having an argument with Mrs. Davies in Henley-on-Thames, someone who took off in an Audi with Brighton number plates. Was that man your husband?" "Yes," she said. "That would be Ian, in the midst of yet another fine plan going awry." "A plan?" 'Ian always has plans. And if he hasn't a plan, he has a promise. Plans and promises, promises and plans. All of which generally amount to nothing." "That'll do, Lydia." The statement, sharply spoken, came from the doorway. Lynley turned to see that they had been joined by a lanky man with the weathered and yellowing skin of a chronic smoker. He did as his wife had done, crossing the room to the tortoiseshell box and taking a cigarette. He jerked his head at his wife. This apparently communicated a desire to her, for in response she brought out her lighter a second time. She passed it to him and he used it, saying to Lynley, "What can I do for you?" "He's come about your sister," Lydia Staines said. "I told you that you should expect him, Ian." "Leave us." He lifted his chin in the direction of the two chairs to indicate the cats, adding, "And take them with you before they get turned into someone's new coat." Lydia Staines threw her cigarette still smouldering into the fireplace. She scooped up a cat in each arm and said, "Come along Caesar," to the one who remained. She went on with, "I'll leave you to your fun, then," and accompanied by the animals, she left the room. Staines watched her go, something in his eyes of an animal's hunger as his glance travelled over her body, something round his mouth of a man's loathing for a woman with too much power over him. When he heard a radio clicked on somewhere in the back of the house, he gave his attention to Lynley. He said, "I saw Eugenie, yes. Twice. In Henley. We had a row. She'd given me her word, her promise, that she'd speak to Gideon that's her son, but I expect you know that already, don't you? and I was depending on her to do it. But she said she'd changed her mind, said something had come up that made it impossible for to her to ask him .. . And that was it. I took off out of there in a dead blind rage. But someone saw us, I take it. Saw me. Saw the car." "Where is it?" Lynley asked. "Being serviced." "Where?" "Local dealership. Why?" "I'll need the address. I'll need to see it, to talk the people at the dealership as well. They do body work there, I expect." Staines' cigarette tip glowed, long and bright, as he took in enough smoke to see him through the moment. He said, "What's your name?" "DI Lynley. New Scotland Yard." "I didn't knock down my sister, DI Lynley. I was angry. I was damn well desperate. But running her over wouldn't take me an inch towards what I need, so I planned to wait a few days a few weeks if it took that and if I could hold out and try her again." "Try her for what?" Like his wife, he tossed his cigarette into the fireplace. He said, "Come with me," and headed out of the sitting room. Lynley followed him. They went to the first floor of the house, up stairs so well-carpeted that their footfalls were soundless. They walked along a corridor where rectangles of darker paper on the walls indicated paintings or prints had been removed. They entered a darkened room that was set up as an office with a desk holding a computer monitor that glowed with text and numerical information. Lynley examined this and saw that Staines had logged onto the internet, having chosen an online stock broker as his reading or research material. "You play the market," Lynley said. "Abundance." "What?" "Abundance. It's all about thinking and living abundance. Thinking and living abundance effects abundance, and that abundance produces more of the same." Lynley frowned, trying to piece this together with what he saw on the screen. Staines continued. "It's all about thinking in the first place. Most people stay stuck in paucity because that's the only thing they know and that's what they've been taught. I was like that myself once. I was damn bloody like that." He came to join Lynley at the desk and laid his hand on a thick book that was open next to his computer's keyboard. This was heavily highlighted in a variety of colours, as if the reader had studied it for years and had taken something new from each perusal of its words. It looked like a text -Lynley thought of vaguely of economics but Staines' words sounded more like a new age philosophy. The man continued in a low, intense voice. "We attract to-our lives that which closely resembles our thoughts," he said insistently. "Think beauty, and we're beautiful. Think ugliness, and we're ugly. Think success, and we become successful." "Think mastery of the international market, and we have it?" Lynley said. "Yes. Yes. If you spend your life contemplating your limits, you can expect no freedom from limitation." Staines' eyes fixed on the glowing monitor. In its light, Lynley saw that his left eye was milky with a cataract, and the skin was puffy beneath it. He went on. "I used to live only within my limits. I was bound by drugs, by drink, by horses, by cards. If it wasn't one thing, it was another. I lost everything that way my wife, my children, my home but that'll not happen to me again. I swear it. Abundance will come. I live abundance." Lynley was beginning to get the picture. He said, "It's a risky sort of business, playing the market, isn't it, Mr. Staines? A great deal of money can be made. Or lost." "There is no risk, with faith, right action, and belief. Right thought produces the result that's intended by God, Who is Himself goodness and Who wants goodness for His children. If we are one with Him and part of Him, we are part of the good. We must tap into it." As he spoke, he stared intently at the screen. It was divided in such a way that the continually altering prices on a stock exchange somewhere flickered in a band along the bottom. Staines looked mesmerised by this band, as if its moving figures were coded directions to find the Holy Grail. "But isn't the good open to interpretation?" Lynley asked. "And isn't it the case that man's timeline and God's timeline to reaching the good may be running on different calendars?" "It's abundance," Staines said, and he spoke through his teeth. "We define it and it comes." "And if it doesn't, we're in debt," Lynley said. Abruptly, Staines reached forward and pressed a button on the monitor. The screen faded. He directed his words to it, and his tone underscored a rage that he held at bay. "I hadn't seen her for years. I hadn't bothered her for years. I never asked her for a God damn thing. All those years with the drugs, the drink, the horses, I never asked. I usually went to Doug and he helped me when he could. But this last time he said, "Can't do it, old man. Have a look at the cheque book if you don't believe me." So what was I supposed to do?" "You asked your sister for money to pay down your debt. What's it from, Mr. Staines? Selling short? Day trading? Buying futures? What?" Staines swung away from the monitor, as if the sight of it now offended him. He said, "We've sold what we can. We have only a bed left in our room. We're eating from a card table in the kitchen. The silver's gone. Lydia's lost her jewellery. And all I need is a decent break, which she could have helped me to get, which she promised to help me to get. I told her I'd pay her back. I'd pay him back. He's got thousands, millions. He has to have." "Gideon. Your nephew." "I trusted her to speak to him. She changed her mind. Something's come up, she said. She couldn't ask him for money." "Did she tell you this the other night when you saw her?" "That's when she told me." "Not earlier?" "No." "Did she tell you what the "something" was?" "We argued like hell. I begged. Begged my own sister, but.. . no. She didn't tell me." Lynley wondered why the man was admitting so much. Addicts, he knew from personal experience, were masters of manipulation. His own brother had demonstrated that for years. But Lynley was no intimate of Ian Staines, not a close relative whose overpowering sense of responsibility for something that was not in fact his responsibility was nevertheless going to compel him to hand over even metaphorically the cash that was needed 'just this once'. Yet he knew with the assurance of long experience that Staines was saying nothing without being fully aware of what it was. Lynley said, "Where did you go when you left your sister, Mr. Staines?" "Drove round till half past one in the morning, till I knew Lydia would be asleep when I got home." "Is there anyone who can confirm that? Did you stop for petrol somewhere?" "Didn't need to." "I'll ask you to take me to the dealership where your car's being serviced, then." "I didn't run Eugenie down. I didn't kill her. That would have gained me nothing." "It's routine, Mr. Staines." "She said she'd talk to him. I just needed a break." What he needed, Lynley thought, was a cure for his delusions. Chapter Thirteen Libby Neale took the corner into Chalcot Square so sharply that she had to put out a foot to prevent the Suzuki from going into a skid. She'd decided to take a break from her delivery route by scoring an English version of a BLT at a Pret a Manger on Victoria Street, and while she'd been munching at one of the stand-up counters, she'd spied a newspaper that a previous customer had left lying by an empty Evian bottle. She'd flipped it over to see that it was the Sun, the paper she loathed most due to the taunting presence of the Page Three Girl who served as a daily reminder to Libby Neale of all she was not. She was about to shove it to one side when the headline grabbed her attention. Virtuoso's Mother Murdered took up about four inches of space. Beneath it was a grainy picture that was dated by the hairstyle and the clothing of the woman in it: Gideon's mother. Libby snatched up the paper and read it as she ate. She made the jump to page four where the story continued, and what she saw on that page made her mouthful of sandwich begin to taste like wood shavings. The entire spread covered not the death of Gideon's mother about which only a limited amount of information was currently available but another death entirely. Shit, Libby thought. The Fleet Street dickheads were digging everything up all over again. And tabloids being what they were, it was only a matter of time before they started hounding Gideon himself. In fact, they probably were already hounding him. A side bar about Gideon blowing his concert at Wigmore Hall was a feature just begging for further exploration. And as if the poor dude didn't have enough messing up his mind, the paper looked like it was trying to make some sort of connection between Gideon's tough time at that concert and the hit and run in West Hampstead! As if, Libby thought contemptuously. Like Gideon would even recognise his mother if he'd seen her on the street or something? Uncharacteristically, she'd thrown half her sandwich away and stuffed the tabloid down the front of her leathers. She had another two deliveries to make, but to hell with that noise. She needed to see Gideon. In Chalcot Square, she roared counterclockwise around the street and skidded to a stop right in front of the house. She pulled the motorcycle onto the sidewalk without bothering to chain it to the railing. Up the front steps in three strides, she banged on the door, then followed that with a long ring on the bell. He didn't answer, so she looked around the square to see if she could spy his Mitsubishi. She picked it out in front of a yellow house a few doors down on the right. He was at home. So come on, she thought, answer the door. Within the house, she heard his telephone begin ringing. Four rings and it was abruptly cut off, which made her think he was at home and just not answering the door, but then a distant disembodied voice that she couldn't recognise told her that Gideon's answering machine was taking a message. "Damn," she muttered. He must have gone off somewhere. He must have learned that the papers were digging up everything about his sister's death and decided to split for a while. She couldn't blame him. Most people had to live through shit only once. But it looked like he was going to have to live through everything connected with her murder a second time. She went down to her flat. The day's post lay on the mat, and she picked this up, unlocked her door, and looked through the letters as she stepped inside. Among the BT bill, a bank statement showing that her account was in dire need of an emergency transfusion, and a circular for a home alarm system, there was also ale gal sized envelope from her mother, which Libby dreaded opening because of the possibility of being confronted with yet another of her sister's success stories. But she tore the end off it anyway, and as she removed her helmet with one hand, with the other she shook out the single sheet of purple paper that her mother had sent. Have What You Want.. . Be Everything You Dream ran in heavy black script across the page. It seemed that Equality Neale CEO of Neale Publicity and recently featured on the cover of Money magazine was giving a seminar in Boston on the topic of Self-Assertion and Achievement in Business, which she would follow with another appearance in Amsterdam. Mrs. Neale had written in the precise hand that would have done proud the nuns who'd taught her, Wouldn't it be nice if the two of you could get together? AH could arrange for a stopover on her way back. How far is Amsterdam from London? Not far enough, Libby thought, and she balled up the announcement. Still, the very idea of Ali and everything so righteously irritating about her that made her Ali caused Libby to bypass the refrigerator where she'd normally have headed after being thwarted in her intentions to see Gideon. Instead she poured herself a virtuous glass of highland water in lieu of the six cheddar quesadillas she was feeling like scarfing down. As she drank it, she looked out of the window. Against the wall that marked the side boundary of Gideon's backyard stood his kite-making she'd, and its door was ajar, a light within throwing a wedge of illumination onto the ground in front of it. She set her water glass on the counter and ducked outside, bounding up steps that were grey-green with lichen. She called out, "Hey, Gideon!" as she strode down the path in his direction. "You in there?" There was no response, which gave Libby a qualm and slowed her steps for a moment. She hadn't seen Richard Davies' Granada out in the square, but she hadn't been looking for it. He might've come calling for another one of those pain-in-the-butt father son talks of his that he appeared to be addicted to. And if he'd managed to piss off Gideon just enough, Gideon might've left on foot and Richard might right now be getting even by wrecking Gideon's kites. That would be just like him, Libby thought. The one thing Gid did that wasn't connected to that stupid violin and his father wouldn't hesitate a second to smash it to smithereens. He'd even come up with a good excuse afterwards. "It was taking you away from your music, son." As if, Libby thought scornfully. Giedeon's kites weren't what needed wrecking. Richard continued, if only in her head, "I accepted it as a hobby before, Gideon, but I can't accept it now. We've got to get you well. We've got to get you playing. You've concerts scheduled, recordings to make, and a public waiting." Fuck off, Libby told Richard Davies. He's got a life. He's got a good life. Why don't you think about getting one, too? The thought of actually going to the mat with Richard for once of actually telling him off without Gideon there to stop her renewed Libby's energetic surge along the path. She reached the she'd and knocked the door the rest of the way open. Gideon was there, no Richard with him. He was sitting at his makeshift design table. A large piece of paper was taped on the working surface before him, and he sat staring at it like it had something to say to him if he only listened to it long and hard enough. Libby said, "Gid? Hi. I saw the light." He didn't act like he'd heard her. He kept his gaze on the paper in front of him. The only change in him was that he began to squint as he looked it over. Libby said, "I knocked on the door upstairs. I rang the doorbell too. I saw your car in the square, so I figured you were home. Then when I saw the light out here .. ." She heard her own words die off, like a plant that's wilting without its necessary water. He said, his eyes still fixed on the paper, "You're back from work early." "I got my deliveries better organised today so I wouldn't be backtracking all over the place for once." She was surprised at her aptitude for hasty lying. Something of Rock was rubbing off on her. "I'm surprised your husband didn't want you to stay on anyway." "He doesn't know, and I'm sure as hell not telling him." She shivered. A small electric heater stood on the floor near him, but Gideon didn't have it on. She said, "Aren't you cold without a sweater or something?" "I hadn't actually noticed." "Been out here long?" "A few hours, I think." "So what're you doing? Another kite?" "Something to fly," he said. "Higher than the others." "Sounds cool." She went to stand behind him, eager to see his latest design. She said, "You could do this professionally. No one makes kites like you do, Gid. They're incredible. They're ' The sight of the design paper stopped her. What he'd produced was an elaborate mass of smudges where he'd drawn and then erased what he'd drawn. They covered the paper, with some of the erasures tearing through it. Gideon turned to look at her when she didn't complete her remarks. He turned so quickly that she didn't have time to arrange her face. He said, "I've lost this as well, it seems." She said, "No, you haven't. Don't be dumb. You're just.. . blocked or stopped up or something. This is a creative thing, right? Making kites is creative. Anything creative gets stopped up now and then." He read her face and apparently saw on it what she hadn't said. He shook his head. He looked the worst she'd seen him look in all the time since he'd been unable to play his music. He looked worse even than he'd looked just the previous night when he'd come to tell her that his mother was dead. His light hair lay flat and unwashed against his skull, his eyes seemed sunken, and his lips were so chapped that they looked like scales were growing on them. It all seemed so extreme, she thought. Hell, he hadn't even seen his mother in years, and he hadn't exactly been tied to her when she was alive, had he? Not like he was tied to his dad. As if he knew her thoughts and wanted to respond to correct them, he said, "I saw her, Libby." "Who?" He said, "I saw her, and I forgot that I saw her." "Your mom?" Libby asked. "You saw your mom?" "I don't know how I'd forgotten that I saw her. I don't know how it works when you forget, but that's what happened." He was looking at Libby but she could tell he wasn't seeing her, and he seemed to be talking to himself. He sounded so filled with self-loathing that she hastened to reassure him. She said, "Maybe you didn't know who she was. It'd been .. . what.. . years and years .. . since you were a kid that you last saw her. And you don't have any pictures of her, do you? So how would you even remember what she looked like?" "She was there," he said dully. "She said my name. "Do you remember me, Gideon?" And she wanted money." "Money?" "I turned away from her. I am too important, you see, and I have important concerts to give. So I turned away. Because I didn't know who she was. But I'm at fault for that, no matter what I knew or when I knew it." "Shit," Libby murmured as she began to realise what he was implying. "Gid, heck. You're not thinking you're, like, responsible for what's happened to your mom, are you?" "I don't think," he said. "I know." And he moved his gaze away from her, fixing it on the open doorway, where the daylight had faded and what remained of it were shadows that created great wells of darkness. She said, "That's bullshit. If you'd known who she was when she came to you, you would've helped her out. I know you, Gideon. You're good. You're decent. If your mother was on the ropes or something, if she needed cash, you wouldn't've ever let her go under. Yeah, she ran out on you. Yeah, she kept away from you for years. But she was your mom and you aren't the kind of guy who holds grudges against anyone, least of all your mom. You're not like Rock Peters." Libby gave a humourless laugh at the thought of what her estranged husband might have done had his mother shown up in his life asking for money after a twenty year absence. He'd've given her a piece of his mind, Libby thought. He'd've given her more than a piece of his mind. Mother or not, he'd've probably given her the sort of smacking around that he reserved for women who righteously pissed him off. And he would've been righteously pissed off at that: having a deserting mom show up on his doorstep asking for money without so much as a how've-you-been-son first. In fact, he might've been so pissed off that Libby put the brakes on her runaway thoughts. She told herself that the whole idea that Gideon Davies of all people would lift a hand to harm even a spider was plain idiotic. He was an artist, after all, and an artist wasn't the type of man who would run down someone in the street and expect to keep his creative flow flowing afterwards. Except that here he was with the kites, unable to do what he'd earlier been able to do with ease. She said, although her mouth was dry, "Did you hear from her, Gid? I mean after she asked you for money. Did you hear from her again?" "I didn't know who she was," Gideon repeated. "I didn't know what she wanted, Libby, so I didn't understand what she was talking about." Libby took that for negation because she didn't want to take it as anything else. She said, "Listen, why don't we go inside? I'll make you some tea. It's freezing in this place. You gotta be an ice cube if you've been out here a while." She took his arm and he allowed himself to be helped to his feet. She switched out the light and together they felt their way through the gloom to the door. He seemed like a heavy burden to Libby, leaning against her as if all his strength had been depleted in the hours he'd spent trying to design a simple kite. "I don't know what I'm going to do," he said. "She would have helped me, and now she's gone." "What you're going to do is have a cup of tea," Libby told him. "I'll throw in a tea cake on the side." "I can't eat," he said. "I can't sleep." "Then sleep with me tonight. You're always able to sleep with me." They didn't do anything else, she thought, that was for sure. For the first time she wondered if he was a virgin, if he'd lost the ability to be close to a woman once his mother deserted him. She knew next to nothing about psychology, but it seemed like a reasonable explanation for Gideon's apparent aversion to sex. How could he take the chance that a woman he grew to love might actually abandon him again? Libby led him down the steps to her kitchen, where she discovered that she didn't have any of the tea cakes she'd promised him. She didn't have anything to toast at all, but she bet that he did, so she hustled him up to his own part of the house and sat him at the kitchen table while she filled the kettle and rustled through his cupboards for tea and something edible that would go with it. He sat looking like the living dead .. . although Libby winced when she came up with the analogy. She chatted about her day in an attempt to distract him and she found herself putting so much energy into the effort that she built up a sweat beneath her leathers. Without a thought, she unzipped the top and started to work her way out of it as she talked. The newspaper she'd stuffed inside fell out. Just like a piece of buttered bread, it fell with the part she wouldn't wish to find face up exactly that: face up. The screaming headline managed what screaming headlines always seek to do: It got Gideon's attention and he bent from his chair and pulled the paper to him as Libby made a grab for it herself. She said, "Don't. It'll just make things worse." He looked up at her. "What things?" "Why put yourself through more shit?" she asked him, her fingers closing over one side of the paper as his fingers closed over the other. "All it does is dig everything up all over again. You don't need that." But Gideon's fingers were as insistent as hers and she knew that she could either let him have the paper or they would rip it in half between them like two women fighting over a dress at a Nordstrom's sale. She released her half, mentally kicking her butt for having brought the paper with her in the first place and for having forgotten she had it in the second place. Gideon read the article much as she had done. And just the same, he made the jump to the double spread of pages four and five. There, he saw the pictures that the paper had disinterred from its morgue: his sister, his mom and his dad, his own eight-year-old self, and the other parties involved. It must have been one hell of a slow news day, Libby thought bitterly. She said, "Hey. Gideon. I forgot to say. Someone phoned when I was banging on your door. I heard a voice on the answering machine. You want to listen? You want me to play it back for you?" "That can wait," he said. "Could've been your dad. Might've been about Jill. How d' you feel about that anyway? You never said. It must be so weird to be going to have a little brother or sister when you're old enough to have a kid yourself. Do they know what it's going to be?" "A girl," he said, although she could tell his mind was elsewhere. "Jill had the tests. It's going to be a girl." "Cool. A little sister. What a trip for you. You'll be, like, so totally excellent a big brother." He got to his feet abruptly. "I can't cope with any more nightmares. I don't sleep for hours when I go to bed. I lie there and I listen and I watch the ceiling. When I finally fall asleep, there're the dreams. The dreams and the dreams. I can't cope with the dreams." The kettle clicked off behind her. Libby wanted to see to the tea, but there was something in his face, something so wild and despairing in his face .. . She hadn't seen such an expression before, and she told herself that she was mesmerised by it, drawn in to it in such a powerful way that any action other than looking at him was completely impossible. Better that, she thought, than go in any other direction .. . like wondering if his mother's death had pushed Gideon over the edge. That couldn't be the case because what reason was there? Why would a man like him wig out if his mom died? If his mother whom he hadn't seen or heard from in years just died? Okay, so he saw her once, so she asked him for money, so he didn't know who she was and refused .. . Was that something to totally lose it over? Libby didn't think so. But she knew that she was distinctly glad that Gideon was seeing a psychiatrist. She said," 'd you tell your shrink about the dreams? They're supposed to know what they mean, aren't they? I mean, what else are you paying them for if not to tell you what your dreams mean so that you can stop having them. Right?" "I've stopped seeing her." Libby frowned. "The shrink? When?" "I cancelled my appointment today. She can't help me get back to the violin. I've been wasting my time." "But I thought you liked her." "What does it mean that I liked her? If she can't help me, what the hell's the point? She wanted me to remember and I've remembered and what's been the result of that. Look at me. Look at this. Look. Look. Do you actually think I can play like this?" He held out his hands, and she saw something she'd not noticed before, something she knew hadn't been there twenty-four hours ago when he'd first come to her and told her of his mother's death. His hands were shaking. They were shaking bad, like her grandpa's hands shook before his Parkinson's medication kicked in. One part of her wanted to celebrate what it meant that Gideon had stopped seeing the psychiatrist: He was beginning to define himself as more than a violinist, which was definitely good. But another part of her felt a prickling of unease at what he was saying. Without the violin, he could discover who he was but he had to want to make the discovery, and he didn't much sound or look like a man willing to embark on a journey of self-actualisation. Still, she said gently, "Not playing's not the end of the world, Gideon." "It's the end of my world," he told her. He went into the music room. She heard him stumble, hit against something, and curse. A light switched on and as Libby saw to the tea Gideon listened to the message that had come in while he'd been trying to work in the she'd. "This is Detective Inspector Thomas Lynley," a plush costume-drama baritone informed them. "I'm on the way up to London from Brighton. Will you phone me on my mobile when you get this message? I need to speak to you regarding your uncle." An uncle now? Libby wondered as the detective recited his cell phone number. What next? How much more was going to be heaped on Gideon and when would he finally shout, "Enough!" She was about to say, "Wait till tomorrow, Gid. Sleep with me tonight. I'll make you not have nightmares. I promise," when she heard Gideon punching in numbers on his telephone. A moment later he began to speak. She tried to sound busy with the tea, but she listened all the same, in Gideon's best interests. "Gideon Davies here," he said. "I got your message .. . Thanks .. . Yes, it was a shock." He listened long to something that the detective was telling him. He finally said, "I'd prefer it on the phone, if it's all the same to you." Score one for our side, Libby thought. We'll have a quiet night and then we'll sleep. But as she took their tea cups to the table, Gideon went on, after another pause to listen to the cop. "Very well, then. If there's no other way." He recited his address. "I'll be here, Inspector." And he hung up. He came back to the kitchen. Libby tried to look as if she hadn't been eavesdropping. She went to a cupboard and opened it, searching for something to go with their tea. She settled on a bag of Japanese crackers. She ripped it open and dumped its contents into a bowl, searching out two peas and popping them into her mouth as she carried it back to the table. "One of the detectives," Gideon said unnecessarily. "He wants to talk to me about my uncle." "Something happen to your uncle, too?" Libby scooped a spoonful of sugar into her cup. She didn't really want the tea, but as she'd been the one to suggest it, she didn't see a way to get out of drinking it. "I don't know," Gideon told her. "Think you should call him before the cops get here, then? Check out what's going on?" "I've no idea where he is." "Brighton?" Libby felt her face get hot. "I overheard that guy say he was coming in from Brighton. On his message. When you played it." "It could be Brighton. But I didn't think to ask his name." "Whose?" "My uncle's." "You don't know .. . ? Oh. Well. Never mind, I guess." It was just another twist in his family history, Libby thought. Lots of people didn't know their relatives. As her father would have said, it was a sign of the times. "You couldn't put him off till tomorrow?" "I didn't want to put him off. I want to know what's happening." "Oh. Sure." She was disappointed, seeing herself ministering to him throughout the long evening, figuring inanely that ministering to him now that he was at his lowest might lead to something more between them, making a final breakthrough somehow. She said, "If you can trust him, I guess." "Trust him how?" "Trust him to tell you the truth. He's a cop, after all." She shrugged and scooped up a handful of the Japanese mix. Gideon sat. He pulled his teacup towards him, but he didn't drink. "It doesn't matter one way or another." "What doesn't?" "Whether he tells me the truth or not." "No? Why not?" Libby asked. Gideon looked her square in the face when he delivered the blow. "Because I can't trust anyone with the truth. I didn't know that before. But I know that now." Things were moving from bad to worse. J.W. Pitchley, aka Tongue Man aka James Pitchford logged off the internet, stared at the blank screen, and cursed it to hell. He'd finally managed to get Cream Pants on the net for some cybertalk, but despite a good half hour of reasoning with her, she wasn't going to cooperate. All she had to do was walk into the Hampstead police station and have a five minute conversation with DCI Leach and she wouldn't do it. She merely needed to confirm that she and a man she knew only as Tongue Man had spent the evening together, first in a South Kensington restaurant and then in a claustrophobic little room above Cromwell Road where the ceaseless traffic noise disguised the frantic creaking of bedsprings and the cries of pleasures that he coaxed from her when he performed the services implied by his moniker. But no, she couldn't do that for him. No matter that he'd brought her off six times in under two hours, no matter that he'd held off taking his own satisfaction till she was weak, sodden, and limp with having taken hers, no matter that he'd fulfilled her every seamy fantasy about the rewards of anonymous sex. She wasn't going to step forward and 'face the humiliation of having a complete stranger know the sort of woman I can be under certain unusual circumstances'. I'm a bloody stranger, you filthy bitch! Pitchley had roared, if only in his head. You didn't think twice about letting me know what you like to get up to when you're panting for it. She'd seemed to know what he was thinking, though, despite the fact that he didn't communicate it on the screen. She'd written They'd want my name, you see. I can't have that, Tongue. Not my name. Not with tabloids being what they are. I'm sorry, but you understand that, don't you? Which was how he'd come to realise that she wasn't divorced. She wasn't a woman in her declining years who was desperate for a man to prove she still had It. She was a woman in her declining years who was looking for a thrill to balance against the tedium of marriage. That marriage had to be a longtime covenant, one made not with an Everyman or an Anyman but with a Somebody, an important Somebody, a politician, perhaps, or an entertainer, or a successful and well-known entrepreneur. And if she gave her name to DCI Leach, it would quickly leak through the porous substance that was the hierarchy of power at the police station. Having leaked through that, it would find its way to the ears of an informant from within, a snout who accepted cash from a journalist eager to make his name by outing someone on the front page of his filthy scandal sheet. Bitch, Pitchley thought. Bitch, bitch, bitch. She might have thought of that before she'd met him at the Valley of Kings, Mrs. Butter-Wouldn't-Melt-If-You-Put-It-On-Coals. She might have thought of all the potential consequences before she walked in, dressed to be seen as Mrs. Demure, Mrs. Out-Of-Style, Mrs. I've-Got-No-Experience-With-Men, Mrs. Please-Please-Show-Me-I'm-Still-Desirable-Because-I've-Been-So-Low-On-M elf-For-So-Long. She might have thought it could actually come to having to say Okay, I was there in the Valley of Kings, having drinks and then dinner with an utter stranger whom I met online in a chat room where people hide their identities while sharing their fantasies about wild, wet, and lubricious sex. She might have thought she could be asked to admit to hours lying splayed on a thin-mattressed bed above the South Kensington traffic, naked on that bed with a man whose name she didn't know, didn't ask to know, and didn't want to know. She might have thought, the rotten little cow. Pitchley pushed himself away from his computer and sank his elbows onto his knees. He took his forehead into his hands and dug into it with his fingertips. She could have helped. She wouldn't have been the complete solution to his problem there was still that long period between the Comfort Inn and his arrival in Crediton Hill to be accounted for but she would have been a bloody good start. As it was, he had only his story, his willingness to stick to his story, the unlikely possibility that the evening clerk at the Comfort Inn would confirm his presence two nights ago without confusing that night with the dozens of other nights he'd passed the requisite cash across the counter, and the hope that his face was guileless enough to convince the police to believe his story. It didn't help matters that he knew the woman who'd died in his street in possession of his address. And it truly didn't help matters one iota that he'd once been involved no matter how peripherally with a heinous crime that had taken place when he'd lived under her roof. He'd heard the shrieking that evening and he'd come running because he'd recognised who was crying out. When he'd got there, everyone else was there as well: the child's father and mother, the grandfather, the brother, Sarah-Jane Beckett, and Katja. "I do not leave her for more than a minute," she shrieked, frantically laying this information in front of everyone milling round the closed bathroom door. "I swear. I do not leave her for more than a minute!" And then looming behind her was Robson, the violin master, who grasped her by the shoulders and pulled her away. "You must believe me," she cried and continued to cry as he pulled her with him down the stairs and out of sight. He hadn't known at first what was going on. He hadn't wanted to know and couldn't afford to know. He'd heard the argument between her and the parents, she'd told him she'd been sacked, and the last thing he wanted to consider was whether the argument, the sacking, and the reason for the sacking which he suspected but could not bear to contemplate were in any way related to what lay behind that bathroom door. "James, what's going on?" Sarah-Jane Beckett's hand had slipped into his, clutching at him as she breathed the whisper. "Oh God, something hasn't happened to Sonia, has it?" He'd looked at her and saw that her eyes were glittering, despite her sombre tone. But he hadn't wondered what that glitter meant. He'd only wondered how he could manage to get away from her and go to Katja. "Take the boy," Richard Davies had instructed Sarah-Jane. "For God's sake, get Gideon out of here, Sarah." She'd done as he commanded, taking the little white-faced boy into his bedroom where music was playing, issuing blithely forth as if nothing terrible was going on in the house. He himself went seeking Katja and he found her in the kitchen, where Robson was forcing a glass of brandy on her. She was trying to refuse, crying, "No. No. I cannot drink it," looking wild-haired, wild-eyed, and completely wrong for the part of loving, protective nanny to a child who was .. . what? He was afraid to ask, afraid because he already knew but didn't want to face it because of what it might mean in his own small life if what he thought and dreaded proved to be true. "Drink this," Robson was saying. "Katja. For the love of God, pull yourself together. The paramedics will be here in a moment and you can't afford to be seen like this." "I did not, I did not!" She swung round in her chair and grabbed onto his shirt, the collar of which she grasped and twisted. "You must say, Raphael! Say to them that I did not leave her." "You're getting hysterical. It may be nothing." But that did not prove to be the case. He should have gone to her then, but he hadn't because he'd been afraid. The mere thought that something might have happened to that child, might have happened to any child within a house in which he was a resident, had paralysed him. And then later, when he could have talked to her and when he tried to talk to her, in order to declare himself the friend she needed and clearly did not have, she would not speak to him. It was as if the subtle flaying she was taking in the press in the immediate aftermath of Sonia's death had driven her into a corner and the only way she could survive was to become tiny and silent, like a pebble on a path. Every story about the unfolding drama in Kensington Square began with the reminder that Sonia Davies' nanny was the German whose famed escape from East Germany previously considered laudable and miraculous had cost a vital young man his life, and that the luxurious environment in which she found herself in England was a dire and bleak contrast to the situation to which her ostentatious asylum seeking had condemned the rest of her family. Everything about her that was remotely questionable or potentially interpretable was dug up by the press. And anyone close to her was liable to the same treatment. So he'd kept his distance, till it was too late. When she was finally charged and brought to trial, the van that had taken her from Holloway to the Old Bailey had been pelted with eggs and with rotten fruit, and shouts of 'baby killer' greeted her when that same van returned her to the prison at night and she had to make the few yards' walk to the prison's door. Public passion was aroused by the crime she had allegedly committed: because the victim was a child, because the child was handicapped, and because although no one would say it directly her putative killer was German. And now he was back in it all, Pitchley thought as he rubbed his forehead. He was mixed up in it as effectively as if he'd never managed to put twenty years between himself and what had happened in that miserable house. He'd changed his name, he'd switched jobs five times, but all his best efforts to remake himself were going to be brought to nothing if he couldn't get Cream Pants to see that her statement was crucial to his survival. Not that Cream Pants statement was the only thing he needed to put his house in order. He also needed to deal with Robbie and Brent, those two loose cannons who were about to fire. He'd assumed they wanted money again when they'd shown up a second time in Crediton Hill. No matter that he'd already given them a cheque, he knew them well enough to realise there was a decent possibility that Robbie had been inspired by the sight of a Ladbrokes to deposit those funds not in a bank account but on the head of a horse whose name he rather fancied. This assumption on Pitchley's part was ratified when Robbie said, "Show 'im, Brent," not five minutes after the two of them had hulked through his front door, carrying with them the stench of their poor bathing habits. Accepting the instruction, Brent brought forth from his jacket a copy of The Source, which he opened like someone shaking out bed sheets. "Look who it was got mashed on your doorstep, Jay," Brent said with a grin as he showed the scabrous paper's front page. And of course it would be The Source, Pitchley thought. God forbid that either Brent or Robbie would elevate their taste to something less sensational. He couldn't avoid seeing what Brent dangled in front of him: the garish headline, the photograph of Eugenie Davies, the inset photograph of the street in which he himself lived, and the second inset photograph of the boy no longer a boy but a man now and a celebrity. It was all down to him that this death was taking up newsprint at all, Pitchley thought bitterly. If Gideon Davies hadn't achieved fame, fortune, and success in a world that increasingly valued those accomplishments, then the papers wouldn't even be covering this situation. It would simply be an unfortunate hit-and-run that the police were in the process of investigating. Full stop and end of story. Robbie said, "Course, we din't know when we was here yesterday. Mind if I unload this, Jay?" And he'd shrugged his way out of his heavy waxed jacket and lobbed it onto the back of a chair. He made a circuit of the room and a point of examining everything in it. He said, "Nice gaff, this. You done good for yourself, Jay. I expect you got a big name in the City, least 'mong the people who count. That right, Jay? You massage their money and presto amazo, it makes more money and they trust you to do that, don't they?" Pitchley said, "Just say what you want. I'm rather pressed for time." "Don't see why," Robbie said. "Shoot. In New York.. ." He snapped his fingers in the direction of his companion. "Brent. Time in New York?" Brent looked at his watch obediently. His lips moved as he did the maths. He frowned and employed the fingers of one hand. He finally said, "Early." Robbie said, "Right. Early, Jay. Th' market's not closed yet in New York. You got plenty of time to make a few more quid before the day's over. Even 'with this little confab of ours." Pitchley sighed. The only way to get rid of the two men would be to make it look as though he was playing Rob's game. He said, "You're right, of course," and nothing more. He merely walked to a bureau near the window that overlooked the street, and from inside he brought out his cheque book and a biro that he clicked open officially. He carried the cheque book into the dining room, where he pulled out a chair, sat, and began to write. He started with the amount: three thousand pounds. He couldn't imagine that Rob would ask for less. Rob strode into the dining room. Brent, as always, followed his brother. Rob said, "That's what you think, is it, Jay? Us two show up and it's all about money?" "What else?" Pitchley filled in the date and began to write the other man's name. Robbie's hand smacked down on the dining room table. "Hey! You stop that and look at me." And for good measure, he knocked the biro from Pitchley's hand. "You think this is about money, Jay? Me and Brent trot round all this way up to Hampstead, mind you with business waiting to be tended to out there this with a jerk of his head back in the direction of the sitting room, by which Pitchley took that he meant the street 'with us losing dosh by the bucketful just to stand here and bunny with you for ten minutes and you think we come about money? Hell, man." And to the other, "What d'you think of that, Brent?" Brent joined them at the table, The Source still dangling from his fingers. He wouldn't know what to do with the paper till Robbie gave him his next set of instructions. As for now, it gave him something to occupy his hands. The poor oaf was pathetic, Pitchley thought. It was a wonder he'd ever learned to tie his shoes. He said, "All right. Fine," and sat back in his chair. "So why don't you tell me why you've come, Rob?" "Can't just be a friendly visit, that it?" "That's not exactly our history." "Yeah? Well, you think about history. "Cause it's ripe to come back and pay a call on you, Jay." Robbie flicked his thumb at The Source. Cooperatively, Brent held it higher, like a schoolboy displaying his primitive artwork. "Slow going on the news front last few days. No Royals misbehaving, no MP getting caught with his dick in a school girl's hole. The papers're going to start digging, Jay. And me and Brent come to see you to lay our plans." "Plans." Pitchley repeated the word with a great deal of care. "Sure. We took care of things once. We c'n do it again. Situation's bound to heat up fast once the coppers suss out who you really are and when they give the word to the press like they always do ' "They know," Pitchley said, in the hope that he could head Robbie off, that he could bluff him with a partial truth that the man might take as a full admission. "I've already told them." But Rob wasn't swallowing that tale. He said, "No way, Jay. "Cause if you did, they'd feed you to the sharks soon 's they need something to make it look like they been working hard. You know that. So I 'xpect you told them something, true. But if I know you, you didn't tell them all." He eyed Pitchley shrewdly and seemed to like what he read on his face. He said, "Right. Good. So me and Brent here figger we got to lay some plans. You'll be wanting protection and we know how to give it." And then I'll owe you forever, Pitchley thought. Double what I already owe you because it'll be twice in my life that you've played at keeping the hounds at bay. "You need us, Jay," Robbie said. "And me and Brent? We don't turn our backs when we know we're needed. Some people do, but that's not our way." Pitchley could only imagine how it would play out: Robbie and Brent doing battle for him, strong-arming the press in the same ineffectual manner that they'd employed in the past. He was about to tell them to go home to their wives, to their failing inadequate ill-managed business washing waxing buffing the cars of the rich among whom they would never be able to mix. He was about to tell them to piss off permanently because he was tired of being drained like a bath tub and played like a badly tuned piano. Indeed, he opened his mouth to say all of it but that was when the doorbell rang, when he walked to the window and saw who it was, when he said, "Stay here," to Robbie and Brent and closed the dining room doors upon them. And now, he thought miserably as he sat at his computer and tried and failed to come up with a way to bend the will of Cream Pants to his own, he would owe them more. He would owe them more for Rob's quick thinking, the thinking that got him and Brent out of the house and into the park before the dumpy female detective constable was able to put her mitts on them when they'd hidden in the kitchen. No matter that what they might have told her would have added nothing harmful in his present situation. Robbie and Brent would not see it that way. They would see their actions as protecting him, and they would come calling when they thought it was time for him to pay. Lynley made the drive to London in fairly good time after paying a visit to the Audi dealership that was working on the car owned by Ian Staines. He'd taken Staines with him as a safeguard against the man making any phone calls in an attempt to direct the course of Lynley's inquiries, and once they'd pulled to a stop in front of the showroom, he'd told the man to wait in the Bentley while he went inside for a chat. There, he corroborated much of what Eugenie Davies' brother had told him. The car was indeed being serviced; it had been brought in at eight that morning. An appointment for the work had been scheduled on the previous Thursday, and nothing irregular like a request for body work had been noted in the computer when the service secretary had taken the call. When Lynley asked to see the car, that presented no problem either. The service representative walked him out to it, chatting away about the great strides that Audi had made in craftsmanship, manoeuvrability, and design. If he was curious as to why a policeman had come round asking about a particular car, he gave no evidence of this. A potential customer was, after all, a potential customer. The Audi in question stood in one of the service bays, raised some six feet on a hydraulic lift. Its position gave Lynley the opportunity to examine its undercarriage as well as the chance to scrutinise its front end and both of its wings for damage. The front end was fine, but there were scratches and a dent on the car's left wing that looked intriguing. They looked fresh as well. "Any chance a smashed bumper was replaced before you got the car?" Lynley asked the mechanic who was working on it. "Always a chance of that, mate," the man replied. "Bloke don't need to drop money at the dealership if he knows how to shop." So despite the verification provided by the Audi's general condition and its presence just where Staines said it would be, there was still the chance that those scratches and that small dent meant something more than poor driving skills. Staines couldn't be crossed off the list, despite his claim that the scratches and dent were a mystery to him, that 'bloody Lydia uses the car as well, Inspector'. Lynley dropped the man at a bus stop and told him not to disappear from Brighton. "If you move house, phone me," he said to Staines, handing over his card. "I'll want to know." Then he headed for London. Northeast of Regent's Park, Chalcot Square was yet another area of town that was undergoing gentrification. If the scaffolding on the front of several of the buildings hadn't told Lynley this much when he pulled into the square, the freshly painted facades of the rest of the residences would have filled him in on the information. The neighbourhood reminded him of Notting Hill. Here was the same bright paint in a variety of cheerful colours fronting the buildings along the streets. Gideon Davies' house stood tucked into a corner of the square. It was bright blue in colour with a white front door. It possessed a narrow first floor balcony along which ran a low white balustrade, and the french windows beyond that balcony were brightly lit. His knock on the door was answered quickly, as if the house's owner had been waiting on the bottom step just beyond the entrance. Gideon Davies said quietly, "DI Lynley?" and when Lynley nodded, he added "Come upstairs," and led the way. He took him to the first floor, up a staircase whose walls displayed the framed hallmarks of his career, and he led him into the room that Lynley had seen from the street, where a CD system occupied one wall and comfortable furniture scattered across the floor was punctuated by tables and music stands. Sheet music stood on these stands and lay on the table tops, but none of it was open. Davies said, "I've never met my uncle, Inspector Lynley. I don't know how much help I'll be to you." Lynley had read the stories in the newspaper after the violinist had walked out on his concert at Wigmore Hall. He'd thought probably like most of the public interested in the tale that it was another instance of someone who had been too feather-bedded for too many years getting his knickers in a twist about something. He'd seen the subsequent explanations put forth by the young man's publicity machine: exhaustion after a killing schedule of concerts in the spring. And he'd dismissed the entire subject as a three-day wonder that the papers needed to fill column inches at a slow time of year. But now he saw that the virtuoso looked ill. Lynley thought immediately of Parkinson's Davies' walk was unsteady and his hands trembled and of what that disease could do to finish his career. That would be something that the young man's publicity machine would indeed want to keep from the public for as long as possible, calling it everything from exhaustion to nerves until it was impossible for them to call it anything else. Davies gestured to three overstuffed armchairs that formed a group near the fireplace. He himself sat nearest the fire itself: artificial coals between which blue and orange flames rhythmically lapped like a visual soporific. Despite his sickly appearance, Lynley could see the strong resemblance between the violinist and Richard Davies. They shared much the same body type, with an emphasis on bones and stringy muscles. The younger Davies had no spinal curvature, however, although the manner in which he kept his legs locked together and his clenched fists pressed into his stomach suggested that he had other physical problems. Lynley said, "How old were you when your parents divorced, Mr. Davies?" "When they divorced?" The violinist had to think about the question before he answered it. "I was about nine when my mother left, but they didn't divorce immediately. Well, they couldn't have done, not with the law being what it is. So it must have taken them what.. . four years? I don't actually know, now I think of it, Inspector. The subject never came up." "The subject of their divorce or the subject of her leaving?" "Either. She was just gone one day." "You never asked why?" "I didn't like to. We never talked much about personal things in my family. There was a lot of ... I suppose you could call it reticence amongst us. It wasn't just the three of us in the house, you see. There were my grandparents, my teacher, and a lodger as well. Something of a crowd. I suppose it was a way to have privacy: by letting everyone have a personal life that no one else ever mentioned. Everyone kept their thoughts and their feelings to themselves. Well, that was the fashion anyway, wasn't it." "And during the time of your sister's death?" At that, Davies moved his gaze off Lynley and fixed it on the fire but the rest of his body remained motionless. "What about my sister's death?" "Did everyone keep their thoughts and feelings to themselves when she was murdered? And during the trial that followed?" Davies' legs tightened against each other as if they would defend him from the question. Still, he answered frankly despite the picture he painted of his family by doing so. "No one ever talked about it. "Best to forget" was like a family motto, Inspector, and we lived by it." He raised his face towards the ceiling. He swallowed and said, "God. I expect that's why my mother finally left us. No one would ever talk about what desperately needed talking about in that house, and she just couldn't cope with it any longer." "When was the last time you saw her, Mr. Davies?" "Then," he said. "When you were nine years old?" "Dad and I left for a tour in Austria. When we returned, she was gone." "You've not heard from her since?" "I've not heard from her since." "She never contacted you in the last several months?" "No. Why?" "Your uncle says she intended to see you. She intended to borrow money from you. He says that she told him something came up to prevent her from asking you for money. I'm wondering if you know what that something was." Davies looked guarded at that, as if a barrier had come down like a thin shield of steel to cover his eyes. "I've had ... I suppose you could call it some trouble with my playing." He let Lynley fill in the rest: A mother anxious about her son's well-being was unlikely to petition him for funds, either for herself or for a ne'er-do-well brother. That supposition didn't conflict with what Richard Davies had told Lynley about his former wife phoning him to learn more about their son's condition. But the timing was off if the musician's condition was supposed to be what had kept his mother from making her request for funds. Indeed, it was off by several months. For Gideon Davies had undergone his trauma at Wigmore Hall in July. It was now November. And according tolan Staines, his sister's change of heart concerning asking her son for money had occurred in the more immediate past than had Gideon's musical difficulties. "Your father tells me she'd been phoning him regularly about you, so she did know that something was wrong," Lynley said in agreement. "But he made no mention of her wanting to see you or asking to see you. You're certain she didn't contact you directly?" "I think I'd remember my own mother contacting me, Inspector. She didn't, and she couldn't have done. My number's ex-directory, so the only way she had to contact me would have been through my agent, through Dad, or by turning up at a concert and sending a note back stage." "She did none of those things?" "She did none of those things." "And she passed no message to you through your father?" "She passed no message," Davies said. "So perhaps my uncle's lying to you about my mother's intention of seeing me to ask for money. Or perhaps my mother lied to my uncle about her intention of seeing me to ask for money. Or perhaps my father's lying to you about her phone calls to him in the first place. But that last is unlikely." "You sound sure of that. Why?" "Because Dad himself wanted us to meet. He thought she could help me out." "With what?" "The trouble I've had with my playing. He thought she could.. ." Here, Davies went back to looking at the fire, his assurance of a moment before quite gone. His legs trembled. He said, more to the fire than to Lynley, "I don't really believe that she could have helped me, though. I don't believe anyone can help me at this point. But I was willing to try. Before she was killed. I was willing to try anything." An artist, Lynley thought, who was being kept from his art due to fear. The violinist would be looking for a talisman of some sort. He would want to believe his mother was the charm that could get him back to his instrument. Lynley said to make certain, "How, Mr. Davies?" "What?" "How could your mother have helped you?" "By agreeing with Dad." "Agreeing? About what?" Davies considered the question, and when he answered, he told Lynley volumes about the difference between what was going on in his professional life and what the public was being told about it. "Agreeing that there's nothing wrong with me. Agreeing that my head's playing me for a fool. That's what Dad wanted her to do. He has to have her agree with him, you see. Anything else is unthinkable. Now, unspeakable would be par for the course in my family. But unthinkable .. . ? That would take too much effort." He laughed weakly, a brief note that was as humourless as it was bitter. "I'd have seen her, though. And I'd have tried to believe her." So he would have reason to want his mother alive, not dead. Especially if he held fast to the conviction that she was the cure for what ailed his playing. Nonetheless, Lynley said, "This is routine, Mr. Davies, but I need to ask it: Where were you two nights ago when your mother was killed? This would have been between ten and midnight." "Here," Davies said. "In bed. Alone." "And since he left your home, have you had contact with a man called James Pitchford?" Davies looked honestly surprised. "James the Lodger? No. Why?" The question seemed ingenuous enough. "Your mother was on her way to see him when she was killed." "On her way to see James? That doesn't make sense." "No," Lynley said. "It doesn't." Nor, he thought, did some of her other actions. Lynley wondered which of them had led to her death. Chapter Fourteen Jill Foster could see that Richard wasn't pleased at having to entertain another visit from the police. He was even less pleased to learn that the detective had just come from seeing Gideon. He took in this information politely enough as he motioned DI Lynley to a chair, but the manner in which his mouth tightened as the detective imparted his facts told Jill that he wasn't happy. DI Lynley was watching Richard closely as if gauging his most minute reaction. This gave Jill a sense of disquiet. She knew about the police from years of having read newspaper accounts of famously botched cases and even more famous miscarriages of justice, so she was fairly well versed in the extremes they would go to in order to pin a crime on a suspect. When it came to murder, the police were more interested in building a strong case against someone against anyone than they were in getting to the bottom of what happened because building a case against someone meant putting an investigation to rest, which meant getting home to their wives and their families at a reasonable hour for once. That desire underlay every move they made in a murder inquiry, and anyone being questioned by them would do well to be wise to that fact. The police are not our friends, Richard, she told her fiance silently. Don't say a word that they can twist round and use against you later. And surely that's what the detective was doing. He fastened his dark eyes brown they were, not blue as one would have expected in a blond -on Richard and waited patiently for a reply to his statement, a neat notebook open in his large, handsome hand. "When we met yesterday, you didn't mention you'd been advocating a meeting between Gideon and his mother, Mr. Davies. I'm wondering why." Richard sat on a straight-backed chair that he'd swung round from the table on which he and Jill took their meals. He'd made no offer of tea this time. That suggested welcome, which the detective definitely was not. Richard had said upon his arrival and prior to DI Lynley's mentioning the call he'd made on Gideon, "I do want to be helpful, Inspector, but I must ask you to be reasonable with your visits. Jill needs her rest and if we can reserve our interactions for daylight hours, I'd be very grateful." The detective's lips had moved in what the naive might have concluded was a smile. But his gaze took in Richard in such a way as to suggest he wasn't the sort of man used to being told what was expected of him, and he didn't apologise for his appearance in South Kensington or make routine noises about not taking up too much of their time. "Mr. Davies?" Lynley repeated. "I didn't mention that I was attempting to arrange a meeting between Gideon and his mother because you didn't ask me," Richard said. He looked to where Jill was sitting at one end of the table, her laptop open and her fifth attempt at Act III, Scene I of her television adaptation of The Beautiful and Damned taking up space on her screen. He said, "You'll probably want to continue working, Jill. There's the desk in the study .. . ?" Jill wasn't about to be condemned to a sentence in that mausoleum-cum-memorial to his father that posed as Richard's study. She said, "I've gone about as far as I can with this just now," and she went through the exercise of saving and then backing up what she'd written. If Eugenie was going to be discussed, she intended to be present. "Had she asked to see Gideon?" the detective asked Richard. "No, she hadn't." "Are you sure?" "Of course I'm sure. She didn't want to see either of us. That's the choice she made years ago when she left without bothering to mention where she was going." "What about why?" DI Lynley asked. "Why what?" "Why she was going, Mr. Davies. Did your wife mention that?" Richard bristled. Jill held her breath, trying to ignore the stab she felt in her breast at those words: your wife. How she felt about hearing anyone other than herself referred to with that term could not be allowed to matter at the moment because the detective's question got right to the crux of the topic that was of interest to her. She longed to know not only why Richard's wife had left him but also how he'd felt about her leaving him, how he'd felt then and, much more importantly, how he felt now. "Inspector," Richard said evenly, 'have you ever lost a child? Lost a child to violence? Lost a child at the hands of someone who's living right inside your own home? No? You haven't? Well, then, I suggest you think about what a loss like that can do to a marriage. I didn't need Eugenie to give me chapter and verse on why she was leaving. Some marriages survive a trauma. Others do not." "You didn't try to find her once she was gone?" "I didn't see the point. I didn't want to keep Eugenie where she didn't want to be. There was Gideon to consider, and I'm not of the school who believe that two parents for a child are better than one no matter the condition of their marriage. If the marriage goes bad, it has to end. Children survive that better than living in a house that's little more than an armed encampment." "Your break-up was hostile?" "You're inferring." "It's part of the job." "It's taking you in the wrong direction. I'm sorry to disappoint you, but there was no bad blood between Eugenie and me." Richard was irritated. Jill could hear it in his tone, and she was fairly sure that the detective could hear it also. This worried her, and she stirred on her seat and tried to get her lover's attention, to throw him a warning look that he would interpret and act upon, altering if not the substance of his replies then at least their timbre. She well understood the source of his irritation: Gideon, Gideon, always Gideon, what Gideon did and did not do, what Gideon said and did not say. Richard was upset because Gideon hadn't phoned and reported the detective's visit. But the detective wouldn't see it that way. He'd be far more likely to note it as Richard's reaction to being questioned too closely about Eugenie. She said, "Richard, I'm sorry. If you could help me for a moment.. . ?" And to the detective, with an exasperated smile, "I'm running to the loo every fifteen minutes these days. Oh, thank you, darling. Heavens, I'm not quite right on my feet." She held on to Richard's arm, acting the part of a woman lightheaded, waiting for Richard to say that he'd help her along to the loo, which would thus buy him some time to regroup. But to her frustration, he just fastened his arm round her waist for a moment to steady her and said, "Do take care," but made no move to assist her from the room. She tried to telegraph her intentions to him. Come with me. But he either ignored or didn't get the message because once she was apparently solid in her stance, he let go of her and gave his attention back to the detective. There was nothing for it but to go to the loo, which Jill did with as much dispatch as she could muster, considering her size. She needed to pee anyway she always needed to pee now and she squatted over the toilet while trying to hear what was going on in the room she'd just left. Richard was speaking when she returned. Jill was gratified to see that he'd managed to wrest his quick temper under control. He was saying calmly, "My son is suffering from stage fright, Inspector, as I've already told you. He's completely lost his nerve. If you've seen him, you've no doubt also seen that something's badly wrong with the boy. Now, if Eugenie could have helped with that problem in any way, I was willing to try it. I was willing to try anything. I love my son. The last thing I want to see is his life's destruction brought about by an irrational fear." "So you asked her to meet him?" "Yes." "Why so long after the event?" "The event?" "The concert at Wigmore Hall." Richard flushed. He hated, Jill knew, any mention of the venue. She had little doubt that, should Gideon ever regain his music, his father would never again allow him so much as to pass over its threshold. It was the scene of his public humiliation, after all. Better to burn it to the ground. Richard said, "We'd tried everything else, Inspector. Aromatherapy, anti-anxiety treatments, pep talks, psychiatry, everything under the sun save having an astrologer do a reading of the stars. We'd been going those routes for several months, and Eugenie was simply the last resort." He watched Lynley writing in his notebook and he added, "I'd very much appreciate it if this information is kept confidential, by the way." Lynley looked up. "What?" Richard said, "I'm no fool, Inspector. I know how you lot work. The pay's not good so you supplement it by passing along what you can without crossing the line. Fine. I understand. You've got mouths to feed. But the last thing Gideon needs right now is to see his problem splashed all over the tabloids." "I don't generally work with the newspapers," Lynley replied. And after a pause during which he made a note in his book, "Unless I'm forced to, of course, Mr. Davies." Richard heard the implied threat because he said hotly, "You listen here. I'm cooperating with you and you can damn well ' "Richard." Jill couldn't stop herself. There was too much at risk to let him continue when continuing only promised to alienate the detective in ways that were unproductive. Richard clamped his jaws shut and cast a look at her. With her eyes, she appealed to his better judgement. Tell him what he needs to know and he'll leave us. This time, it seemed, he got the message. He said, "All right." And then, "Sorry," to the detective. "This has put me on edge. First Gideon, then Eugenie. After all these years and when we needed her most ... I tend to fly off the handle." Lynley said, "Had you arranged a meeting between them?" "No. I'd phoned and left a message on her machine. She'd not got back to me." "When had you phoned?" "Earlier in the week. I don't remember which day. Tuesday, perhaps." "Was it like her not to return your call?" "I didn't think anything of it. The message I left didn't say I was phoning her because of Gideon. I just asked her to ring me when she had the chance." "And she never asked you to arrange a meeting with Gideon for reasons of her own?" "No. Why would she? She phoned me when Gideon had his ... that difficulty he had at the performance. In July. But I believe I told you that yesterday." "And when she phoned you, it was only about your son's condition?" "It isn't a condition," Richard said. "It's stage fright, Inspector. Nerves. It happens. Like writer's block. Like a sculptor making a mess of a few lumps of clay. Like a painter losing his vision for a week." He sounded, Jill thought, very much like a man who was desperately attempting to convince himself, and she knew that the inspector had to hear this as well. She said to Lynley, attempting to sound unlike a woman making excuses for the man she loved, "Richard's given his life to Gideon's music. He's done it the way any parent of a prodigy must do it: with no thought of himself. And when one gives one's life to something, it's painful watching the project fall to pieces." "If a person is a project," DI Lynley said. She flushed and bit back a retort. All right, she thought. Let him have his moment. She wouldn't allow it to vex her. Lynley said to Richard, "Did your ex-wife ever mention her brother to you in all these phone calls?" "Who? Doug?" "The other brother. Ian Staines." 'Ian?" Richard shook his head. "Never. As far as I know, Eugenie hadn't seen him in years." "He tells me she was going to speak to Gideon about borrowing money. He's in a bad way ' "When the hell is Ian not in a bad way?" Richard interrupted. "Obviously, Doug's dried up as a source of funds if Ian turned to Eugenie. But she wouldn't help him in the past this was when we were married and Doug was short of money so I've little doubt she would have refused him now." He knotted his eyebrows as he realised where the detective was heading. He said, "Why're you asking about Ian?" "He was -seen with her the night she was killed." "How awful," Jill murmured. "He has a temper," Richard said. "He came by it honestly. Their dad was a rager. No one was safe from his temper. He excused it by saying he never lifted a hand against any of them, but his was a special form of torture. And the bastard was a priest, if you can credit that." "What happened to their father?" Lynley asked. "What're you getting at?" "Whatever it was that Eugenie wished to confess to Major Wiley." Richard said nothing. Jill saw the pulse beat a rapid tattoo in the vein on his temple. He said, "I hadn't seen my wife in nearly twenty years, Inspector. She might have wanted to tell her lover anything." My wife. Jill heard the words like a slim lance piercing her just beneath her heart. She reached blindly for the lid of her laptop. She lowered it and fastened it with more precision than was required. The inspector was saying, "Did she mention this man ex-Army, Major Wiley in any of your conversations, Mr. Davies?" "We spoke only of Gideon." "So you know nothing that might have been on her mind?" the detective pressed on. "For God's sake, I didn't even know she had a man in Henley, Inspector," Richard said testily. "So how the hell could I possibly have known what she intended to speak to him about?" Jill tried to locate the feelings beneath his words. She laid his reaction -and whatever emotion underscored it next to his earlier reference to Eugenie as his wife, and she excavated in the dust round both to see what fossilised emotions might remain there. She'd managed to put her hands on the Daily Mail that morning, and she'd flipped through it hungrily to find a picture of Eugenie. So she now knew that her rival had been attractive as Jill herself could never be attractive. And she wanted to ask the man she loved if that loveliness haunted him and, if so, what that haunting meant. She wouldn't share Richard with a ghost. Their marriage was going to be all or nothing and if it was meant to be nothing, then she wanted to know that so at least she could adjust her plans accordingly. But how to ask? How to bring the subject up? DI Lynley said, "She may not have identified it directly as something she wished to talk to Major Wiley about." "Then I wouldn't have known what it was, Inspector. I'm not a mind read Richard stopped abruptly. He stood and for a moment Jill thought that, pushed to the extreme in having to talk about his former wife my wife, he'd called her he intended to ask the policeman to leave. But instead, he said, "What about the Wolff woman? Eugenie might have been worried about her. She must have got that letter telling her about the release. She might have been frightened. Eugenie gave evidence against her at the trial, and she might have fancied that she Wolff -would come looking for her. D'you think that's possible?" "She never told you that, though?" "No. But him. This Wiley. He was there in Henley. If Eugenie wanted protection or just a sense of security, of someone looking after her -he'd have been the one to give it to her. I wouldn't. And if that's what she wanted, she'd've had to explain why she wanted it in the first place." Lynley nodded and looked thoughtful, saying, "That's possible. Major Wiley wasn't in England when your daughter was murdered. He did tell us that." "So do you know where she is?" Richard asked. "Wolff?" "Yes. We've tracked her down." Lynley flipped his notebook closed and stood. He thanked them for their time. Richard said quickly as if he suddenly didn't want the detective to leave them alone with what alone implied, "She might've been intent on settling the score, Inspector." Lynley stowed his notebook in his pocket. He said, "Did you give evidence against her as well, Mr. Davies?" "Yes. Most of us did." "Then watch yourself till we get this cleared up." Jill saw Richard swallow. He said, "Of course. I will." With a nod to both of them, Lynley left. Jill was suddenly frightened. She said, "Richard! You don't think .. . What if that woman killed her? If she tracked down Eugenie, there's every chance that she .. . You could be in danger as well." "Jill. It's all right." "How can you say that with Eugenie dead?" Richard came to her. He said, "Please don't worry. It'll be all right. I'll be all right." "But you've got to be careful. You must watch .. . Promise me." "Yes. All right. I do promise that." He touched her cheek. "Good God. You've gone white as a ghost. You're not worried, are you?" "Of course I'm worried. He as good as said ' "Don't. We've had enough of this. I'm taking you home. No arguments, all right?" He helped her to her feet saying, "You told him an untruth, Jill. At least a partial untruth. I let it go when you said it, but I'd like to correct it now." Jill slid her laptop into its carrying case and looked up as she closed its zip. She said, "Correct what?" "What you said: that I've given my life to Gideon." "Oh. That." "Yes, that. It was true enough once; a year ago even, it was true. But not now. Oh, he'll always be important to me. How can he be otherwise? He's my son. But while he was the centre of my world for more than two decades, there's more to my life now, because of you." He held out her coat. She slid her arms into it and turned to him. She said, "You are happy, aren't you? About us, the baby?" "Happy?" He placed one hand on the mountain of her stomach. "If I could climb inside you and reside with our little Cara, I would. That's the only way that the three of us could be any closer than we already are." "Thank you," Jill said, and she kissed him, raising her mouth for the familiar joining to his, parting her lips, feeling his tongue, and experiencing the answering heat of desire. Catherine, she thought. Her name is Catherine. But she kissed him with both longing and hunger, and she felt embarrassed: to be so hugely pregnant and still to want him sexually. But she suddenly possessed such a longing for him that the heat within her turned into an ache. "Make love to me," she said against his mouth. "Here?" he murmured. "In my lumpy bed?" "No. At home. In Shepherd's Bush. Let's go. Make love to me, darling." "Hmm." His fingers found her nipples. He squeezed them gently. She sighed. He squeezed harder, and she felt her body shoot fire to her genitals in reply. "Please," she murmured. "Richard. God." He chuckled. "Are you certain that's what you want?" "I'm dying for you." "Well, we can't have that." He released her, held his hands on her shoulders, and examined her face. "But you do look completely done in." Jill felt her spirits plummet. "Richard ' He cut in. "So you must swear to me that you'll go to sleep and not open an eye for at least ten hours afterwards. Is that a deal?" Love or something she took for love flooded her. She smiled. Then take me home this instant, and have your way with me. If you don't do both, I won't answer for the consequences to your lumpy bed." There were times when you had to operate on instinct. DC Winston Nkata had seen that often enough while working an investigation in the company of one DI or another, and he recognised that inclination in himself. He'd had that uneasy feeling for the entire afternoon once he'd visited Yasmin Edwards in her shop. It informed him that she wasn't telling him everything. So he stationed himself on Kennington Park Road and settled back with a lamb samosa in one hand and a carton of take away dal as a dipping sauce in the other. His mum would keep his dinner warm, but it might be hours before he could put his lips round the jerk chicken she'd promised him for that night's meal. In the meantime he needed something to settle the growling in his stomach. He munched and kept his attention on the steamed-up windows of Crushley's Laundry just across the street and down three doors from where he'd parked. He'd sauntered by and taken a glimpse inside when the door swung open, and he'd seen her big as life in the back, labouring over an ironing board with steam rising round her like a sauna. "She in today?" he'd asked her employer earlier over the phone not long after leaving Yasmin's shop. "Just a routine check, this is. No need to tell her I'm on the blower." "Yeah," Betty Crushley had said, sounding like a woman talking round a cigar. "Got her mug where it ought to be for once." "Good to hear that." "If good's enough." So he was waiting for Katja Wolff to leave her place of employment for the evening. If she walked the short distance to Doddington Grove Estate, his instinct would require adjustment. If she went somewhere else, he'd know his feeling about her was right. Nkata was dipping the last bite of his samosa into the dal when the German woman finally came out of the laundry, carrying a jacket over her arm. He crammed the pastry into his mouth, ready for action, but Katja Wolff merely stood on the pavement for a minute, just outside the laundry's front door. It was cold, with a sharp wind blowing the smells of diesel fuel against the pedestrians' cheeks, but the temperature didn't appear to bother her. She took a moment to don her jacket and pulled from its pocket a blue beret into which she tucked her short blonde hair. Then she turned up the collar of her coat and set off along Kennington Park Road in the direction of home. Nkata was about to curse his instincts for wasting his time when Katja did the unexpected. Instead of turning into Braganza Street, which led to the Doddington Grove Estate, she crossed and continued down Kennington Park Road without so much as a regretful glance in the direction in which she should have been heading. She passed a pub, the take away where he'd bought his snack, a hairdresser, and a stationery shop, coming to rest at a bus stop where she lit a cigarette and waited among a small crowd of other potential passengers. She rejected the first two buses that stopped, finally climbing onto the third one after she tossed her cigarette into the street. As the bus lumbered into the traffic, Nkata set off after it, glad that he wasn't in a panda car and grateful for the dusk. He didn't make himself popular with his fellow drivers as he tailed the bus, pulling to the kerb when it did, keeping an eye peeled at its every stop to make sure he didn't lose Katja Wolff in the growing gloom. More than one driver gave him two fingers as he wove in and out of the traffic, and he nearly hit a cyclist in a gas mask when a request stop loomed up faster than he was prepared for it. In this fashion, he lurched across South London. Katja Wolffhad taken a window seat on the street side of the bus, so Nkata could get a glimpse of her blue beret when the street curved ahead of him. He was fairly confident that he'd be able to pick her out when she disembarked, and that proved to be the case when, after suffering through the worst of the rush hour traffic, the bus pulled up at Clapham Common. He thought she meant to get a train there, and he wondered how conspicuous he'd be if he had to get on the same carriage as she. Very, he decided. But there was no help for it and no time to consider any other option. He looked desperately for a place to park. He kept one eye on her as she worked her way through the crowd outside the station. Instead of moving inside as he'd expected her to do, however, she went to a second bus stop where, after a five minute wait, she embarked on another ride through South London. She had no window seat this time, so Nkata was forced to keep an eye peeled each time passengers disembarked. It was anxiety producing not to mention maddening to other drivers but he ignored the rest of the traffic and kept his attention where it belonged. At Putney station, he was rewarded. Katja Wolff hopped off and, without a glance right or left, she set off along the Upper Richmond Road. There was no way Nkata could tail her in a car and not stick out like an ostrich in Alaska or become the victim of a commuter's road rage, so he drove past her and, some fifty yards farther along, he found a section of double yellow lines just beyond a bus stop across the street. He veered over and parked there. Then he waited, his eyes on the rear view mirror, adjusting it to take in the pavement opposite. In due course, Katja Wolff came into view. She had her head down and her collar up against the wind, so she didn't notice him. An illegally parked car in London was no anomaly. Even if she glimpsed him, in the fading light he would be just a bloke waiting to fetch someone from the bus stop. When she'd gained some twenty yards past him, Nkata eased his car door open and took up after her. He shrugged his large frame into his overcoat as he trailed her, tucking a scarf round his neck and thanking his stars that his mum had insisted upon his wearing it that morning. He faded into the shadows created by the trunk of an aged sycamore as up ahead of him Katja Wolff paused, turned her back to the wind, and lit a cigarette. Then she strode to the kerb, waited for a break in the traffic, and dashed across to the opposite side. At this point, the road opened into a commercial area comprising an assortment of businesses that were fashioned with residences off-set above them. Here were the sort of enterprises local residents would patronise: video shops, news agents restaurants, florists, and the like. Katja Wolff chose to take her custom to Frere Jacques Bar and Brasserie, where both the Union Jack and the French national flag snapped in the wind. It was a cheerful yellow building fronted by multi-paned transom windows, brightly lit from the interior. As she ducked inside, Nkata waited for a chance to cross over. By the time he got there, she'd removed her coat and handed it over to a waiter who was gesturing her beyond the rows of small tables to a bar that ran along one wall. There were as yet no other patrons in the brasserie, apart from a well-dressed woman in a tailored black suit who sat on a bar stool nursing a drink. She looked like money, Nkata thought. It spoke from her haircut, which was fashioned so that her short hair fell round her face like a polished helmet; it spoke from her attire, which was tasteful and timeless as only significant money can buy. Nkata had spent enough time leafing through GQ in the years in which he'd reinvented himself to know how people looked when they did most of their clothes buying in places like Knightsbridge, where twenty quid might get you a handkerchief but nothing else. Katja Wolff approached this woman, who slid off her bar stool with a smile and came to greet her. They reached for each other's hands and pressed their cheeks together, air kissing in the batty way Europeans had of greeting each other. The woman gestured Katja Wolff to join her. For his part, Nkata hunkered down into his overcoat and watched them from a place he made for himself in the shadows just beyond the bank of the brasserie windows and at the side of an Oddbins. Should they turn his way, he could give his attention to the sale announcements painted in front of him on the window Spanish wine was going for a real treat, he noted. And in the meantime he could watch them and attempt to suss out what they were to each other, although he already had developed a fair set of suspicions in that direction. He'd seen the familiarity in their greeting, after all. And the woman in black had money, which Katja Wolff would probably like just fine. So the pieces were starting to fall into place, aligning themselves with the German's lie about where she'd been on the night that Eugenie Davies had died. Nkata wished there was a way he could have overheard their conversation, however. The manner in which they hovered over their drinks shoulder to shoulder suggested a confidential chat that he would have given much to hear. And when Wolff raised a hand to her eyes and the other put her arm round her shoulders and said something into her ear, he even considered sauntering in and introducing himself, just to see how Katja Wolff reacted to being caught out. Yes. There was something definitely going on here, he thought. This was probably what Yasmin Edwards knew but did not want to speak of. Because one could always tell when one's lover started stepping outside for more than a breath of air or a packet of fags in the evening. And the toughest bit about coping with that knowledge was coming to accept it in the first place. People walked miles to avoid having to look at, talk about, or actually confront something that might cause them pain. Short sighted as it was to wear blinkers in relationships, it was still amazing to see how many people did exactly that. Nkata stamped his feet in the cold and buried his hands in his coat pockets. He watched for another quarter of an hour and was considering his options when the two women began to gather up their belongings. He ducked into Oddbins as they came out of the brasserie door. Half-hidden behind a display of Chianti Classico, he picked up a bottle as if to study its label while the shop assistant eyed him the way all shop assistants eyed a black man who wasn't quick enough to buy what he was touching. Nkata ignored him, his head bent but his gaze fastened on the shop's front windows. When he saw Wolff and her companion pass by, he set the bottle back onto the display, stifled what he wanted to say to the young man behind the till when would he outgrow the need to shout "I'm a copper, all right?" as he grabbed them by the necks of their shirts? and slipped out of Oddbins in the women's wake. Katja's companion had her by the arm, and she was continuing to talk to her as they strolled along. Over her right shoulder dangled aleather bag the size of a briefcase, and she held this firmly tucked under her arm like a woman who was wisely wary to what life on the streets could offer the unaware. In this fashion, the two of them walked not to the station but along the Upper Richmond Road in the direction of Wandsworth. Perhaps a quarter of a mile along, they turned left. This would take them into a heavily populated neighbourhood of terraced and semidetached houses. If they went into a residence there, Nkata knew he would need more than luck to find them. He increased his pace and broke into a jog. He was still in luck, he saw, as he turned the corner. Although several streets turned off this road and bored into the crowded neighbourhood, the two women hadn't taken any of them yet. Rather they were continuing ahead of him, still in conversation but with the German woman talking this time, gesturing with her hands while the other listened. They chose Galveston Road to turn into, a short thoroughfare of terraced houses, some converted into flats and some still standing as single homes. It was a middle class neighbourhood of lace curtains, fresh paint, tended gardens, and window boxes where pansies were planted in anticipation of the coming winter. Wolff and her companion walked along to the midway point, where they turned in through a wrought iron gate and approached a red door. The brass number fifty-five was posted on it, between two narrow translucent windows. The garden here was overgrown, unlike the other small gardens in the street. On either side of the front door, shrubbery had been allowed to flourish, and tentacles from a star jasmine bush at one side and a Spanish broom on the other hungered outward towards the front door as if for an anchoring spot. From across the street, Nkata watched as Katja sidled through the shrubbery and mounted the two steps onto the front porch. She didn't ring the bell. Rather, she opened the door and let herself in. Her companion followed. The door shut behind them and a light went on right inside the entrance. This was followed some five seconds later by a dimmer light, which began to glow behind the curtains at the front bay window. The curtains were such that only silhouettes were visible. But nothing more than silhouettes was necessary to understand what was going on when the two women melded into one figure and into each other's arms. "Right," Nkata breathed. So at last he saw what he had come to see: a concrete illustration of Katja Wolff s infidelity. Laying this information in front of the unsuspecting Yasmin Edwards should suffice to get her to start telling what was what with regard to her companion. And if he left this instant and jogged back to his car, he'd be able to make the drive to the Doddington Grove Estate far in advance of Katja herself, who thus wouldn't be able to prepare Yasmin to hear something which Katja could later label a lie. But as the two figures in the Galveston Road sitting room moved apart to set about doing whatever it was that they intended to do for each other's pleasure, Nkata found himself hesitating. He found himself wondering how he could broach the subject of Katja's infidelity in such a way as to avoid making Yasmin Edwards want to kill the messenger instead of absorbing the message. Then, he wondered why he was wondering that at all. The woman was a charlie. She was also a lag. She'd knifed her own husband and done five years and no doubt learned a few more tricks of the trade while she was inside. She was dangerous and he Winston Nkata, who himself had escaped a life that could have sent him along a path similar to hers -would do well to remember that. There was no need to rush over to the Doddington Grove Estate, he decided. From the looks of things here in Galveston Road, Katja Wolff wasn't going anywhere soon. Lynley was surprised to find his wife still at the St. James house when he arrived. It was nearly time for dinner, long past the hour at which she usually departed. But when Joseph Cotter St. James's father-in-law and the man who had held the Cheyne Row household together for more than a decade admitted Lynley into the house, the first thing he said was, "They're up in the lab, the whole flamin' lot of 'em. No surprise, that. His nibs's got them marching today. Deb's up there 's well, though I don't s'pose she's cooperating like Lady Helen's been doing. Even went without lunch. "Can't stop now," 'e said. "We're almost done." "Done with what?" Lynley asked, thanking Cotter when the other man set down a dinner plate he'd been carrying and took his coat. "God knows. Drink? Cuppa? I made fresh scones this with a nod at the plate if you c'n be bothered to take 'em up with you. I did 'em for tea, but no one came down." "I'll investigate the situation." Lynley took the tray from where Cotter had balanced it precariously on an umbrella stand. He said, "Any message for them?" Cotter said, "Tell 'em dinner's at half eight. Beef in port wine sauce. New potatoes. Courgettes and carrots." "That should certainly tempt them." Cotter snorted. "Should do, yes. But will do? Not likely. But mind you tell 'em there's no skipping this one if they want to keep me cooking. Peach is up there as well, by the way. Don't give her one of them scones, no matter what she does. She's on a diet." "Right." Dutifully, Lynley mounted the stairs. He found everyone where Cotter had promised they would be: Helen and Simon were poring over a set of graphs spread out on a worktable while Deborah was examining a string of negatives just inside her darkroom. Peach was snuffling round the floor. She was the first to spy Lynley, and the sight of the plate he was carrying caused her to prance over to him happily, tail wagging and eyes alight. "If I were naive, I'd think you were welcoming me," Lynley said to the animal. "I've strict orders to refrain from feeding you, I'm afraid." At this, St. James looked up and Helen said, "Tommy!" and glanced at the window with a frown, adding, "Good Lord. What time is it?" "Our results aren't making sense," St. James said to Lynley without other explanation. "A gram as the minimum fatal dose? I'll be laughed out of the hearing." "And when is the hearing?" "Tomorrow." "It looks like a late night, then." "Or ritual suicide." Deborah came to join them, saying, "Tommy, hello. What have you brought us?" Her face lit up. "Ah. Brilliant. Scones." "Your father's sending a message about dinner." "Eat or die?" "Something along those lines." Lynley looked at his wife. "I thought you'd be long gone by now." "No tea with the scones?" Deborah asked, relieving Lynley of the plate as Helen said, "We seem to have lost track of time." "That's not like you," Deborah said to Helen as she set the scones next to a large book that lay open at a grisly illustration of a man apparently dead of something that had caused a glaucous coloured vomit to discharge from his mouth and his nose. Either oblivious of this unappetising sight or completely used to it, Deborah scooped up a scone for herself. "If we can't depend on you to remind us of mealtimes, Helen, what can we depend upon?" She broke her scone in half and took a bite. She said, "Lovely. I hadn't realised I was famished. I can't eat one of these without something to drink, though. I'm fetching the sherry. Anyone else?" "That sounds good." St. James took up a scone himself as his wife left the lab and headed for the stairs. He called out, "Glasses for all, my love." "Will do," Deborah called back and added, "Peach, come. Time for your dinner." The dog obediently followed, her eyes glued to the scone in Deborah's hand. Lynley said to Helen, "Tired?" She had very little colour in her face. "A bit," she said, looping a lock of hair behind one ear. "He's been rather a slave driver today." "When is he not?" "I've a reputation for general beastliness to maintain," St. James said. "But I'm a decent sort underneath the foul exterior. I'll prove it to you. Have a look at this, Tommy." He went to his computer table where Lynley saw that he'd set up the terminal that he and Havers had taken from Eugenie Davies' office. A laser printer stood next to it, and from its tray, St. James took a sheaf of documents. Lynley said, "You've tracked her internet use? Well done, Simon. I'm impressed and grateful." "Save impressed. You could have done it yourself if you knew the first thing about technology." "Be gentle with him, Simon." Helen smiled fondly at her husband. "He's only recently been strong-armed into accepting e-mail into his life at work. Don't rush him too madly into the future." "It might result in whiplash," Lynley agreed. He pulled his spectacles from his jacket pocket. "What've we got?" "Her internet use first." St. James explained that Eugenie Davies' computer not to mention computers in general always kept a record of the sites that a user visited, and he handed over a list of what Lynley was pleased to see were recognisable even to him as web addresses. "It's straightforward stuff," St. James told him. "If you're looking for something untoward in what she was doing on the net, I don't think you're going to find it there." Lynley glanced through what St. James identified as the URLs he'd picked up by examining Eugenie Davies' travel history: These were the addresses she would have typed into the location bar, he said, in order to access individual web sites. If one merely chose the drop down arrow next to the location bar and left clicked on it, one had easy access to the trail an internet user left when he or she logged on. Vaguely listening to St. James's explanation about the source of the information he'd handed over, Lynley made noises of comprehension and ran his gaze over Eugenie Davies' chosen sites. He saw that the other man had assessed the dead woman's usage of the internet with his usual accuracy. Every site at least by name appeared to relate to her job as director of the Sixty Plus Club: She'd accessed everything from a site dedicated to the NHS to a location for pensioners' coach trips round the UK. She appeared to have done some newspaper browsing as well, mostly in the Daily Mail and the Independent. And those sites she'd visited with regularity, particularly in the last four months. This was possible support for Richard Davies' contention that she'd been trying to assess Gideon's condition from the newspapers. "Not much help here," Lynley agreed. "No. But there's some hope with this." St. James handed over the rest of the papers he'd been holding. "Her e-mail." "How much of it?" "That's the lot. From the day she started corresponding on line." "She'd saved it?" "Not intentionally." "Meaning?" "Meaning that people try to protect themselves on the net, but it doesn't always work. They choose passwords that turn out to be obvious to anyone who knows them ' "As she did when she chose Sonia." "Yes. Exactly. That's their first mistake. Their second is failing to note whether their computer is set up to save all the e-mail that comes into it. They think they've got privacy, but the reality is that their world is an open book to anyone who knows which icons turn which pages. In Mrs. Davies' case, her computer dumped all the messages it received into its Recycle Bin whenever she deleted them, but till she emptied the bin itself which she appears not to have done, ever the messages were just stored inside it. It happens all the time. People hit the delete button and assume they've got rid of something when all the computer has actually done is to move it to another location." "This is everything, then?" Lynley gestured with the stack of papers. "Every message she received. Helen's to thank for printing them out. She's also gone through them and marked the ones that look like business messages to save you some time. The rest you'll want to have a more thorough look at." Lynley said, "Thank you, darling," to his wife, who had taken a scone from the tray and was nibbling its edges. He went through the stack of papers, setting aside the ones that Helen had marked as business correspondence. He read the rest of them in chronological order. He was looking for anything even moderately suspicious, something from someone with the potential to do Eugenie Davies harm. And although he admitted this only to himself, he was also looking for anything from Webberly, anything recent, anything embarrassing to the superintendent. Although some of the senders used not their own names but rather monikers apparently related to their line of work or their special interests, Lynley was relieved to see that there were none among them that he could easily associate with his superior at New Scotland Yard. There was also no Scotland Yard address listed, which was even better. Lynley breathed easier and kept on reading to find that there was also nothing among the messages from anyone identifying himself as Tongue-man, Pitchley, or Pitchford. And upon a second examination of the first document St. James had handed him, none of the URLs for the websites Eugenie Davies had visited looked as if they might be a clever cover for a chat room where sexual encounters were set up. Which might or might not, he concluded, move Tongueman-Pitchley-Pitchford off their list. He went back to the stack of e-mail as St. James and Helen returned to their perusal of the graphs they'd been working with upon his arrival, Helen saying, "The last e-mail she received was on the morning of the day she was killed, Tommy. It's at the bottom of the pile, but you might want to have a look at it now. It caught my eye." Lynley saw why when he pulled it out. The message comprised three sentences, and he felt a corresponding chill when he read them: I must see you again, Eugenie. I'm begging. Don't ignore me after all this time. "Damn," he whispered. After all this time. "What do you think?" Helen asked although the tone of her voice indicated that she'd already reached her own conclusion in the matter. "I don't know." There was no closing to the message, and the sender was among the group who used a handle rather than a Christian name. Jete was the word that preceded the provider's identification. The provider itself was Claranet, with no business name associated with it. This indicated that a home computer had probably been used to communicate with Eugenie Davies, which brought Lynley at least some measure of reassurance. Because as far as he knew, Webberly had no personal computer at his home. He said, "Simon, is there a way to trace the real name of an e-mail user if he's adopted a nickname?" "Through the provider," St. James replied, 'although I expect you'd have to strong-arm them into giving it to you. They're not obliged to." "But in a murder investigation .. . ?" Helen said. "That might be sufficient coercion," St. James admitted. Deborah returned, carrying four glasses and a decanter. "Here we are," she announced. "Scones and sherry." She proceeded to pour. Helen said quickly "Nothing for me, Deborah. Thanks," and helped herself to a dab of butter that she dotted on a scrap of the scone she'd taken. "You've got to have something," Deborah said. "We've been working like slaves. We deserve a reward. Would you rather a gin and tonic, Helen?" She wrinkled her nose. "What on earth am I thinking? Gin and tonic and scones? Now that sounds appetising." She handed a glass to her husband and another to Lynley. "This is quite a red-letter day. I don't think I've ever heard you turn down a sherry, Helen, especially after being run ragged by Simon. Are you all right?" "I'm perfectly fine," Helen said. And she glanced at Lynley. Now was the moment, of course, Lynley thought. It was the perfect time for him to tell them. With the four of them congenially together in St. James's lab, what was to stop him from saying off-handedly, "We've an announcement, by the way, although you're probably moments away from guessing it. Have you guessed?" He could put his arm round Helen's shoulders as he spoke. He could carry on and kiss the side of her head. "Parenthood looms," he could saying jokingly. "Goodbye to late nights and Sunday morning lie-ins. Hello to nappies and baby bottles." But he didn't say any of that. Instead, he held his glass up to St. James and declared, "Many thanks for the efforts with the computer, Simon. I'm in your debt once again," and he threw back a mouthful of the sherry. Deborah looked from Lynley to Helen curiously. For her part, Helen quietly gathered up the graphs as St. James drank to Lynley's toast. A tight little silence fell among them, during which Peach scooted back up the stairs, her dinner behind her. She trotted into the lab expectantly, deposited herself beneath the worktable where the scones still sat, and gave one sharp bark as her plume of a tail dusted the floor. "Yes. Well," Deborah said. And then brightly as the dog barked again, "No, Peach. You're not to have any scone. Simon, look at her. She's completely incorrigible." Focusing on the little dog got them through the moment, at the end of which Helen began gathering her belongings. She said to St. James, "Simon, dearest, while I'd love to stay and help you labour through the night on this problem .. ." His reply was, "You've been a brick to stay this long. I shall muddle onward heroically alone." "He's worse than the dog," Deborah remarked. "Shamelessly manipulative. You'd better be off before he traps you." Helen took the advice. Lynley followed her. St. James and Deborah remained in the lab. Lynley and his wife didn't speak until they were standing on the Cheyne Row pavement with the wind whipping up the street from the river. Then Helen said only, "Well." She spoke the word to herself, not to him. She looked a mixture of sad and tired. Lynley couldn't tell which was predominant, but he had a good idea. Helen said, "Did it happen too soon?" He didn't pretend to misunderstand. "No. No. Of course not." "Then what?" He searched for an explanation he could give her, one that both of them could live with, which would not come back to haunt him sometime in the future. He said, "I don't want to hurt them. I picture how they'll look, creating expressions of pleasure on their faces while inside they're screaming at the inequity of it all." "Life's filled with inequities. You of all people know that. You can't make the playing field level for everyone, just as you can't know the future. What's in store for them. What's in store for us." "I know that." "Then .. ." "It's just not as simple as knowing, Helen. Knowing doesn't take their feelings into account." "What about my feelings?" "They mean everything to me. You mean everything to me." He reached for her and fastened the top button of her coat, adjusting the scarf round her neck. "Let's get you out of the cold. Did you drive? Where's your car?" "I want to talk about this. You've been acting as if.. ." She let her voice die. The only way to say it was to say it directly. No metaphor existed to describe what she feared, and he knew that. He wanted to reassure her, but he couldn't. He'd expected joy, he'd expected excitement; he'd expected the bond of joint anticipation. What he hadn't expected was guilt and dread: the knowledge that he was obliged to bury his dead before he could wholeheartedly welcome his living. He said, "Let's go home. It's been a long day, and you need your rest." She said, "More than rest, Tommy," and she turned from him. He watched as she walked to the end of the street where, next to the King's Head and Eight Bells, she'd left her car. Malcolm Webberly replaced the telephone receiver in its cradle. Quarter to twelve and he shouldn't have rung them, but he couldn't stop himself. Even when his mind had said that it was late, that they would be asleep, that even if Tommy was still working at this hour, Helen would already be in bed and unlikely to be happy with a late night phone call, he hadn't listened. Because throughout the day, he'd waited for word and when it hadn't come, he'd realised that he wouldn't sleep that night until he spoke to Lynley. He could have phoned Eric Leach. He could have asked for an update on the investigation, and Eric would have given him everything he had. But involving Eric would have brought everything back to Webberly with more piercing clarity than he could afford. For Eric had been too close to it all: there in the house in Kensington Square where it had all begun, there at nearly every interview he'd conducted, there to give evidence at the trial. He'd even been there standing right beside Webberly when they'd had their first look at the dead baby's body, an unmarried man then who had no idea what it was even to have to consider the loss of a child. He'd not been able to stop himself thinking of his own Miranda when he'd seen the lifeless body of Sonia Davies lying on the postmortem table. And as the first cut into her flesh was made, that telltale Y-incision that could never be disguised as anything other than the brutal but necessary mutilation it was, he'd flinched and held back a cry of protest that such a cruelty had to be practised where such a cruelty had gone before. There was cruelty not only in the manner of Sonia Davies' death, though. There was cruelty in her life as well, even if it was only a natural cruelty, a minuscule blip on the genetic screen that had resulted in her condition. He'd seen the doctors' reports. He'd marvelled at the succession of operations and illnesses that such a tiny child had managed to endure in her first two years of life. He'd blessed his own luck in having produced with his wife a miracle of health and vitality in his daughter Miranda, and he wondered how individuals actually coped when what they were given demanded of them more than they'd ever thought they'd be asked to produce. Eric Leach had wondered the same himself, saying, "Okay, I see why they had a nanny. It was too much to handle, with Granddad half a loon and the son another Mozart or whatever he is. But why'd they not get someone qualified to look after her? They needed a nurse, not a refugee." "It was a bad decision," Webberly had agreed. "And they're going to take a beating for it. But no beating they take in court or in the press will match the beating they'll be giving themselves." "Unless .. ." Leach hadn't completed his remark. He'd looked down at his feet and shuffled them, instead. "Unless what, Sergeant?" "Unless the choice was deliberate, sir. Unless they didn't really want proper care for the baby. For reasons of their own." Webberly had allowed his face to reveal the disgust he felt. "You don't know what you're talking about. Wait till you have a kid and then see how it feels. No. Don't wait. I'll tell you myself. It feels like killing anyone who'd even look at her sideways." And as more information came in over the next few weeks, that's how he'd felt like killing because he'd not been able to get away from seeing his own Miranda in the death of this child who was so unlike her. She was toddling round the house at that point, always with her tattered Eeyore clutched under her arm, and he started seeing danger to her everywhere. In every corner there was something that could claim her, ripping out his heart and gnawing at his entrails. So he'd begun to want to avenge the death of Sonia Davies as a way to insure his own child's safety. If I bring her killer to an unquestioned justice, he told himself, I will buy God's protection for Randie with the studied coin of my righteousness. Of course, he hadn't known there was a killer at all, at first. Like everyone else, he'd thought a moment of negligence had resulted in a tragedy that would haunt the lives of everyone concerned. But when the post-mortem uncovered the old fractures on her skeleton and when a closer examination of the body revealed the contusions along her shoulders and her neck that spoke of her being held down and deliberately drowned, he'd felt the blossoming of vengeance within him. It was vengeance for the death of this child, imperfect though she had been born. But it was also vengeance for the mother who had given birth to her. There were no eye witnesses and little enough evidence, which troubled Leach but did not worry Webberly. For the crime scene told its own tale, and he knew that he could use that tale to support a theory that was quick in coming. There was the bath itself with its tray so placidly undisturbed, disavowing the claim that a terrified nursemaid had come upon her charge slipped under the water and frantically called for help as she pulled her out of the tub and attempted to save her. There were the medicines a cabinet of them and afterwards the extensive medical records and the story both told about the burden of caring for a child in Sonia's condition. There were the arguments between the nanny and the parents, sworn to by more than one member of the household. And there were the statements given by the parents, the elder child, the grandparents, the teacher, the friend who was supposed to have phoned the nanny on the night in question, and the lodger who was the only person who tried to avoid any discussion of the German girl at all. And then there was Katja Wolff herself, her preliminary statement, and after that her unbelievable and enduring silence. Because she wouldn't speak, he had to rely on others who lived with her. I didn't actually see anything that night, I'm afraid.. . Of course, there were moments of tension when she was dealing with the baby.. . She wasn't always as patient as she might have been but the circumstances were terribly difficult, weren't they .. . She seemed eager enough to please at first.. . It was an argument among the three of them because she'd overslept again.. . We'd decided to sack her .. . She didn't think it was fair .. . We weren't willing to give her a reference because we didn't think she was suited to child care From the others if not from Katja Wolff herself, a pattern of behaviour emerged. With the pattern had come the story, a stitched-together fabric of what had been seen, what had been heard, and what could be concluded from both. "It's still a weak case," Leach had said respectfully during a pause in the proceedings at the magistrate's court. "It's a case all the same," Webberly had replied. "As long as she keeps her lips locked up, she's doing half our job for us and hanging herself for good measure. I can't think her brief hasn't told her that." "She's getting crucified in the press, sir. They're reporting the hearing verbatim, and every time you're talking about interviewing her when you say "she refused to answer the question", it's making her look ' "Eric, what's your bloody point?" Webberly had asked the other officer. "I can't help what the press are printing. That's not our problem. If she's worried how silence might look to potential jurors, then she might consider breaking it for us, mightn't she?" Their concern, he told Leach, and their job was to bring justice into an ugly equation, to lay out facts so the magistrate's court could decide to hold her over for trial. And that's what he had done. That was all he had done. He had made justice possible for Sonia Davies' family. He could not have brought them peace or an end to their nightmares. But he could have brought and did bring them that. Now, in the kitchen of his home in Stamford Brook, Webberly sat at the table with a cup of Horlicks fast cooling in front of him, and he thought about what he'd learned in his late-night phone call to Tommy Lynley. Central to his thoughts was one item: that Eugenie Davies had found a man. He was glad of it. For the fact of Eugenie's finding a man might go some distance towards alleviating the remorse he'd never ceased to feel for the cowardly manner in which he'd ended the love between them. He'd had the best of intentions towards her, right up until the day he knew their relationship could not continue. He'd begun as a dispassionate professional entering into her life to bring justice to her family, and when that role had begun to alter upon their chance encounter at Paddington Station, it had at first altered merely to the role of friend, and he'd convinced himself that he could maintain it, ignoring that part of him that soon wanted more. She's vulnerable, he'd told himself in a vain effort to hold his feelings in check. She's lost a child and she's lost a marriage, and you must never tread on ground that's so soft and insubstantial. Had she not been the one to speak what should have remained unspoken, he wouldn't have ventured further. Or at least that was what he told himself during the long period of their affair. She wants this, he claimed, as much as I do, and there are instances when the shackles of social convention must be thrown off in order to embrace that which is obviously a higher good. The only way for him to justify an affair such as theirs had been to see it in spiritual terms. She completes me, he told himself. What I share with her happens on the level of the soul, not just on the level of the body. And how is a man to live a full life if he has no nurture on the level of the soul? He didn't have that with his wife. Their relationship, he decided, was the stuff of the temporal, ordinary world. It was a social contract founded on the largely outdated idea of sharing property, having traceable bloodlines for potential offspring, and possessing a mutual interest in cohabitation. Under the agreements of the contract, a man and a woman were to live together, to reproduce if possible, and to provide each other with a lifestyle mutually satisfactory to them both. But nowhere was it written or implied that they were to give succour to each other's imprisoned and earthbound spirit, and that, he told himself, was the problem with marriage. It effected in its participants a sense of complacency. That complacency effected a form of oblivion in which the man and the woman so joined together lost sight of themselves and each other as sentient individuals. So it had happened in his own marriage. So, he determined, it would not happen within the amorphously described marriage of spirits that he had with Eugenie Davies. He went further down the path of self-delusion as time passed and he continued to see her. He told himself that his chosen career was tailor-made to support the infidelity that he began to label his God-given right. His job had always called for late and unstructured hours, for entire weekends given to cases under investigation, for sudden absences resulting from phone calls in the night. Why had fate or God or coincidence brought him to such a line of work if he was not intended to use it to further his growth and development as a human being? Thus he persuaded himself to continue, acting the part of his own Mephistopheles, launching a thousand ships of faithlessness onto the sea of his life. The fact that he could maintain a virtual double existence by assigning responsibility for his absences to the Met began to convince him that such a double existence was his due. But mankind's fatal failing was the desire for more of everything. And that desire had ultimately come to haunt what had begun as a celestial love, rendering it as temporal as everything else but simultaneously making it no less compelling. She'd ended her marriage, after all. He could end his. It would be a matter of a few uncomfortable conversations with his wife, and he would be free. But he'd never managed to have those conversations with Frances. Her phobias had conversed with him instead, and he'd discovered that he, his love, and all the Tightness he could muster to defend that love were no match for the affliction that possessed his wife and that ultimately came to possess them both. He'd never told Eugenie. He'd written one final letter, asking her to wait, and he'd never written to her again. He'd never phoned her. He'd never seen her. Instead, he'd placed his life on hold, telling himself that he owed it to Frances to gauge each step of her recovery, anticipating the moment when she'd be well enough for him to tell her that he wanted to leave. By the time he'd understood that his wife's condition would not be something that was easily vanquished, too many months had passed and he could not bear the thought of seeing Eugenie again, only to have to tear himself from her permanently. Cowardice stilled the hand that might have held the pen or dialled the phone number. Better to tell himself that they'd really had nothing just a few years of passionate interludes that wore the guise of loving unity than to face her, to have to release her, and to recognise that the rest of his life would be without the meaning he longed to give it. So he just let things go, let them drift away, and he allowed her to think of him what she would. She hadn't phoned him or sought him out, and he'd used those facts to assure himself that she'd not been as deeply affected as he by either the relationship itself or by the ending that had been thrust upon it. And having thus assured himself, he'd set about obliterating the image of her in his mind, as well as the memory of their afternoons, evenings, and nights together. In doing so, he'd been as unfaithful to her as he'd been to his wife. And he'd paid the price. But she'd found a man, a widower, he'd learned, someone free to love her and to be to her all that she deserved. "A chap called Wiley," Lynley had said over the phone. "He's told us she wanted to speak to him about something. Something, apparently, that had been keeping them from carrying on in a relationship together." "You think she might have been murdered to prevent her from speaking to Wiley?" Webberly asked. "That's only one of half a dozen possibilities," Lynley had said. He'd gone on to catalogue the rest of them, taking the care of the gentleman that he was rather than employing the heartless determination of the investigator he should have been not to mention whether he'd unearthed anything that pointed to Webberly's own ties to the murdered woman. Instead, he spoke at length of the brother, of Major Ted Wiley, of Gideon Davies, of J. W. Pitchley who was also James Pitchford, and of Eugenie's former husband. "Wolff is out of prison," Lynley said. "She's been on parole for just twelve weeks. Davies hasn't seen her, but that's not to say she hasn't seen him. And Eugenie gave evidence against her at the trial." "As did nearly everyone else associated with that time. Eugenie's evidence was no more damning than anyone else's, Tommy." "Yes. Well. I think everyone connected with that case would be wise to take care till we've got things sorted out." "Are you considering this a stalking?" "That can't be dismissed." "But you can't think Wolff s stalking everyone." "As I said, I'm thinking everyone should take a bit of care, sir. Winston phoned, by the way. He followed her earlier tonight to a house in Wandsworth. It looked like a rendezvous. She's more than she seems." Webberly had waited for Lynley to segue from Katja Wolff s rendezvous from the message of infidelity it implied to his own infidelity. But the connection wasn't made. Instead, the DI said, "We're going through her e-mail and her internet usage as well. There's a message been left her the morning of her death, and she read it because it was in the Recycle Bin from someone called Jete asking to see her. Begging her, incidentally. After all this time. Those were the words." "On e-mail you say?" "Yes." Lynley paused on his end of the line before going on. "Technology's fast out pacing my ability to understand it, sir. Simon did the delving into her computer. He's given us all her e-mail and all her internet usage as well." "Simon? What's her computer doing with St. James? Bugger it, Tommy. You should have taken it straight ' "Yes. Yes, I know. But I wanted to see .. ." He hesitated again, then finally took the plunge. "There's no easy way to ask this, sir. Do you have a computer at home?" "Randie's got a laptop." "Do you have access?" "When it's here. But she keeps it in Cambridge. Why?" "I think you probably know why." "You suspect that I'm Jete?" ' "After all this time." It's more a matter of crossing Jete off the list if it's you. You can't have killed her ' "For God's sake." "Sorry. I'm sorry. But it's got to be said. You can't have killed her because you were at home with two dozen witnesses celebrating your anniversary. So if you are Jete, sir, I'd like to know so that I don't waste time trying to track him down." "Or her, Tommy. "After all this time." It could be Wolff." "It could be Wolff. But it's not you?" "No." "Thanks. That's all I need to know, sir." "You got to us quickly. To me and Eugenie." "I didn't get to you. Havers did." "Havers? How the hell .. . ?" "Eugenie kept your letters. They were all together in a drawer in her bedroom. Barbara found them." "Where are they now? Have you given them to Leach?" "I didn't think they were germane to the case. Are they, sir? Because common sense tells me I shouldn't dismiss the possibility that Eugenie Davies wanted to talk to Ted Wiley about you." "If she wanted to talk to Wiley about me, it would have been only to confess past transgressions before getting on with her life." "Would that have been like her, Superintendent?" "Oh yes," Webberly sighed. "Just like." She hadn't been brought up so, but she'd lived as a Catholic, with the Catholic's profound sense of guilt and remorse. That had coloured the way she'd lived in Henley, and that would have coloured the manner in which she faced the future. He was certain. At his elbow, Webberly became aware of a gentle pressure. Alf, he saw, had lumbered up from his raggedy nighttime cushion by the stove and had come to join him, pressing the top of his head against his master's arm, perhaps sensing that canine solace was needed. The dog's presence reminded Webberly that he was late in taking the Alsatian for his regular nightly stroll. He went upstairs first to check on Frances, compelled by the twinge of guilt he felt at having spent the last forty-eight hours dwelling in mind and in spirit, if not in body, with another woman. He found his wife in their double bed, snoring gently, and he stood looking down at her. Sleep wiped the lines of anxiety from her face. While it did not render her youthful again, it served to provide her with an air of defenceless ness that he'd never been able to ignore. How many times over the years had he done just this stood looking down at his sleeping wife and wondered how they'd come to this pass? how they'd gone so long just getting through days that turned into weeks that swiftly became months yet never once venturing each to understand what inner yearnings caused them to sing in their chains faces held to the sky when they were alone? But he had the answer to that question, at least on his own part, when he glanced at the window with its curtains shut tight, knowing that behind them the glass was locked and a wooden dowel lay on the floor for use as further security on the nights he wasn't at home. They'd both been afraid from the start. It was just that Fran's fears had taken a form more readily apparent to the casual observer. Her fears had claimed him, making a plea for his constancy that was as eloquent as it was unspoken, and his own fears had bound him to her, terrified that he might have to become more than he'd lived as already. A low whining from the foot of the stairs roused Webberly. He pulled the blankets over his wife's exposed right shoulder, whispered, "Sleep well, Frances," and left the room. Below, Alfie had moved to the front door where he sat on his haunches expectantly. He got to his feet as Webberly went back to the kitchen for his jacket and the dog's lead. He was circling round in anticipation when Webberly returned to him and clipped the lead on his collar. Webberly's intention was to take the Alsatian on a shorter walk tonight: just a circuit of the rectangle described by walking to the end of Palgrave Road, up to Stamford Brook Road, and back to Palgrave via Hartswood Road. He was tired, and he didn't much feel like trailing Alfie across the green that was Prebend Gardens. He realised that this wasn't giving the Alsatian his due. The dog was nothing if not patience, tolerance, and fidelity incarnate, and all he asked in return for his devotion was food, water, and the chance to run with happy abandon round, through, and across Prebend Gardens twice each day. It was small enough consideration for him, but tonight Webberly didn't feel up to it. "I'll give you twice the time tomorrow, Alf," he promised. At the corner of Stamford Brook Road, traffic trundled by, lighter now than at another hour but still coughing with the occasional noise of buses and cars. Alf sat obediently as he'd been trained to do. But when Webberly would have turned to the left instead of crossing over to the gardens, Alfie didn't move. He looked from his master to the gloomy expanse of trees, shrubs, and lawn across the street, wagging his tail urgently against the pavement. "Tomorrow, Alf," Webberly told him. "Twice as much time. I promise. Tomorrow. Come, boy." He gave a tug on the lead. The dog rose. But he looked over his shoulder at the garden in such a way that Webberly felt he could not commit yet another act of betrayal by pretending to ignore what the animal so patently wanted to do. He sighed. "All right. But just a few minutes. We've left Mum alone and she won't like it if she wakes up and finds neither one of us there." They waited for the traffic lights to change, the dog's tail flapping and Webberly finding his own spirits lifting at the animal's pleasure. He thought what ease there was in dog hood So little in life equated with a dog's contentment. They crossed over and entered the garden, its iron gate creaking with autumn rust. With the gate closed behind them, Webberly released Alfie from the lead and in the dim light provided from Stamford Brook Road on one side and South Side on the other, he watched the dog lope happily across the lawn. He'd not thought to bring a ball, but the Alsatian didn't seem to mind. There were plenty of nighttime smells to entice him, and he partook of them in his romp. They spent a quarter of an hour like this, Webberly slowly pacing the distance from the west to the east side of the garden. The wind had come up earlier in the day, and he drove his hands into his pockets, regretting the fact that he'd come out without either gloves or scarf. He shivered and crunched along the cinder path that bordered the lawn. Beyond the iron fence and the shrubbery, traffic whizzed by in Stamford Brook Road. Aside from the wind creaking the bare limbs of the trees, that was the only sound in the night. At the far end of the garden, Webberly took the lead from his pocket and called to the dog, who'd run once again to the opposite end of the green like a gambolling lamb. He whistled and waited as the Alsatian galloped the length of the lawn a final time, arriving in a happy heaving mass of damp fur hung with sodden leaves. Webberly chuckled at the sight of the animal. The night was far from over for them both. Alf would need brushing when they got home. He clipped the lead back on. Outside the garden gate, they headed up the avenue towards Stamford Brook Road where a zebra crossing marked a safe passage to Hartswood. They had the right of way here, although Alfie did again what he'd been trained to do: He sat and waited for the command that indicated it was safe to cross. He waited for a break in the traffic which, because of the hour, wasn't long in coming. After a bus trundled past, he and the dog stepped off the pavement. It was less than thirty yards across the street. Webberly was a careful pedestrian, but for a moment his attention drifted to the pillar box that stood on the opposite side of the street. It had been there since the reign of Queen Victoria, and it was there that he'd dropped his letters to Eugenie over the years, including the final one that had ended things without ending things between them. His eyes fixed on it and he saw himself there as he'd been on a hundred different mornings, hurriedly stuffing a letter through the opening, casting a look over his shoulder in the unlikely event that Frances had come walking in his wake. Seeing himself as he'd been long ago, engaged by love and desire to act the apostate from vows that were asking the impossible of him, he was unprepared. He was unprepared just for a second, but a second was actually all it took. To his right, Webberly heard the howl of an engine. At that same moment, Alfie began to bark. Then Webberly felt the impact. As the dog's lead flew up into the night, Webberly hurtled towards the pillar box that had -been the receptacle of his countless outpourings of unending love. A blow crushed his chest. A flash of light pierced his eyes like a beacon. And then it was dark. Gideon 23 OCTOBER 1:00 A.M. I dreamed again. I woke, remembering it. I sit up in bed now, notebook on my knees, in order to scribble a summary. I'm in the house in Kensington Square. I'm in the drawing room. I'm watching children playing outside in the central garden, and they see me watching them. They wave and gesture for me to join them and I can see they're being entertained by a magician in a black cape and a top hat. He keeps drawing live doves from the ears of the children, tossing the birds high into the air. I want to be there, I want the magician to draw a bird from my ear, but when I go to the drawing room door, I find there is no handle, just a keyhole through which I can peer in order to see the reception hall and the staircase. But when I peer through that keyhole, which turns out to be much more like a porthole than a keyhole, I see not what I expect to see but my sister's nursery on the other side. And although the light is bright in the drawing room, it's quite dim in the nursery, as if the curtains have been closed for nap time I hear crying on the other side of the door. I know the crying is Sonia's, but I can't see her. And then the door is suddenly not a door any longer but a heavy curtain through which I push, finding myself not in the house any longer but in the garden behind it. The garden is much larger than it actually was in reality. There are enormous trees, huge ferns, and a waterfall that drops into a distant pool. In the middle of the pool is the garden shed, the same shed against which I saw Katja and the man on that night I've recalled. Outside in the garden, I still hear Sonia crying, but she's wailing now, nearly screaming, and I know that I'm meant to find her. I'm surrounded by undergrowth that seems to grow by the moment, and I fight my way through it, beating down fronds and lilies to locate the crying, just when I think I'm close to it, it seems to come from a different area entirely, and I'm forced to begin again. I call for help: my mother, Dad, Gran, or Granddad. But no one comes. And then I reach the edge of the pool and I see that there are two people leaning against the shed, a man and woman. He's bent to her, he's sucking from her neck, and still Sonia is crying and crying. I can tell by her hair that the woman is Libby, and I'm frozen there, watching, as the man I can't yet identify sucks upon her. I call to them; I ask them to help me find my little sister. The man raises his head when I call out, and I see he's my father. I feel rage, betrayal. I am immobilised. Sonia still cries. Then Mother is with me, or someone like Mother, someone of her height and her shape with hair the same colour. She takes my hand and I'm aware I must help her because Sonia needs us to calm her crying, which is angry now, high-pitched with rage like a tantrum being thrown. "It's all right," the Mother Person tells me. "She's just hungry, darling." And we find her lying beneath a fern, covered completely by fronds. Mother Person picks her up and holds her to her breast. She says, "Let her suck me. She'll calm, then." But Sonia doesn't calm down because she can't feed. Mother Person doesn't free her breasts for Sonia and even if she did, nothing would be accomplished. For when I look at my sister, I see she's wearing a mask that covers her face. I try to remove it, but I can't; my fingers keep slipping off. Mother Person doesn't notice that there's anything wrong, and I can't make her look down at my sister. And I can't and I can't remove the mask that she's wearing. But I feel frantic to do so. I ask the Mother Person to help me, but that's no good because she doesn't even look down at Sonia. I hurry and fight my way back to the pool to find help there, and when I reach the edge, I slip and fall in, and I'm turning and turning beneath the water, unable to breathe. That's when I wake up. My heart was slamming. I could actually feel the way the adrenaline had shot into my blood stream. Writing all of it down has calmed my heartbeat, but I don't expect sleep to return to me tonight. Libby isn't with you? you want to know. No. She didn't return from wherever she jetted off to when we got back from Cresswell-White's office and found my father waiting at the house. Are you worried about her? Should I be worried? There is no should to anything, Gideon. But there is to me, Dr. Rose. I should be able to remember more. I should be able to play my instrument. I should be able to take a woman into my life without fearing that somehow I'll lose it all. Lose what? What's holding me together in the first place. Do you need to be held together, Gideon? That's how it feels. 23 OCTOBER Raphael did his daily duty by me today but instead of sitting in the music room and waiting for a miracle to happen, we walked down to Regent's Park and strolled through the zoo. One of the elephants was being hosed off by a keeper, and we paused by the enclosure and watched as sheets of water cascaded down the side of the enormous creature. Sprouts of hair along the elephant's backbone bristled like wires as the water hit them, and the animal shifted its weight as if trying to gain its footing. "Odd, aren't they?" Raphael said. "One wonders about the design philosophy behind the elephant. When I see a biological oddity like this, I'm always sorry that I don't know more about evolution. How, for example, did something like an elephant develop out of the primordial muck?" "He's probably thinking the same of us." I'd noticed upon Raphael's arrival that he was decidedly good humoured. And he'd been the one to suggest we get out of the house and into the questionable air of the city and into the even more questionable fragrance of the zoo, where the atmosphere was redolent with the smells of urine and hay. This prompted me to wonder what was going on. I saw my father's hand in it. "Get him out of that house," he would have commanded. And when Father commanded, Raphael obeyed. That was the key to his longevity as my instructor: He held the reins to my musical training; Dad held the reins to the rest of my life. And Raphael had always accepted this division of their responsibilities towards me. As an adult, of course, I could have chosen to replace Raphael with someone else to accompany me on my concert tours apart from Dad, naturally and to be a partner to my daily sessions of practice on the violin. But at this point with more than two decades of instruction, cooperation, and partnership between us, we knew each other's styles of living and working so well that to bring in someone else had never been a consideration. Besides, when I could play, I liked playing with Raphael Robson. He was and is a brilliant technician. There's a spark missing in him, an additional passion that would have long ago forced him to overcome his nerves and to play publicly, knowing that playing is forging a link with an audience, which makes the quadrinomial defined by composer-music-listener-performer complete. But aside from that spark, the artistry and the love are there, as is a remarkable ability to distil technique into a series of critiques, commands, adjustments, assignments, and instructions that are understandable to the neophyte artist and invaluable to the established violinist who seeks to improve himself on his instrument. So I never considered replacing Raphael, despite his obedience to and loathing of my father. I must have always sensed the antipathy between them, even if I never saw it openly. They coped despite their dislike of each other, and it was only now when they'd begun to seem at such pains to hide their mutual loathing that I felt compelled to question why it had existed in the first place. The natural answer was my mother: because of how Raphael may have felt about my mother. But that seemed to explain only why Raphael disliked my father so much, Dad being in possession of what Raphael might have wanted for himself. It didn't explain my father's aversion to Raphael. There had to be something more. Perhaps it came from what Raphael could give you? you offer me as potential answer. And it's true that my father played no instrument, but I think their dislike came from something more basic and atavistic than that. I said to Raphael as we moved from the elephants to seek out the koalas, "You were told to get me out of the house today." He didn't deny it. "He thinks you're dwelling too much on the past and avoiding the present." "What do you think?" "I trust Dr. Rose. At least I trust Dr. Rose the father. As to Dr. Rose the daughter, I assume she's discussing the case with him." He glanced at me anxiously as he said the word case, which reduced me to a phenomenon that would doubtless appear in a psychiatric journal at a later date, my name scrupulously withheld but everything else forming neon arrows that all pointed to me as the patient. "He's had decades of experience with the sort of thing you're going through and that's going to count for something with her." "What sort of thing do you think I'm going through?" "I know what she's called it. The amnesia bit." "Dad told you?" "He would do, wouldn't he? I'm as much involved with your career as anyone." "But you don't believe in the amnesia, do you?" "Gideon, it's not my place to believe or disbelieve anything." He led me into the koala enclosure where simulated eucalyptus trees were formed by crisscrossing branches that rose out of the floor, and the forest in which the bears would have lived in the wild was expressed by a mural painted on a tall pink wall. A single diminutive bear slept in the V of two of the branches, nearby him hanging a bucket that contained the leaves upon which he was supposed to feed. The forest floor beneath the bear was concrete, and there were no bushes, no diversions, and no toys for him. He had no companions to break his solitude either, only the visitors to his enclosure, who whistled and called out to him, frustrated that a creature nocturnal by nature would not accommodate himself to their timetable. I looked at all this and felt a heaviness settle onto my shoulders. "God. Why do people come to zoos?" "To remind them of their freedom." To exult in their superiority." "I suppose that's true as well. After all, as humans we hold the keys, don't we?" "Ah," I said. "I did think there was a greater purpose behind this sojourn to Regent's Park than just getting some air. I've never seen you as interested either in exercise or in animals. So what did Dad say? "Show him he ought to count his blessings. Show him how bad life really can be?" "There are worse places than a zoo if that was his intention, Gideon." "Then what? And don't tell me you thought up the zoo on your own." "You're brooding. It's not healthy. He knows it." I laughed without humour. "As if what's happened already is healthy?" "We don't know what's happened. We can only guess. And that's what this amnesia business is. It's a qualified guess." "So he's brought you on board. I wouldn't have thought that possible, your past relationship with him considered." Raphael kept his gaze on the pathetic koala. "My relationship with your father isn't your concern," he said steadily, but the pinpoints of perspiration always his Nemesis began to sprout on his forehead. Another two minutes and his face would be dripping and he'd be using his handkerchief to mop up the sweat. "You were in the house the night Sonia drowned," I said. "Dad told me that. So you've always known everything, haven't you? Everything that happened, what led up to her death, and what followed it. ' "Let's get some tea," Raphael said. We went to the restaurant in Barclays Court although a simple kiosk selling hot and cold drinks would have done as well. He wouldn't say anything until he'd meticulously looked over the mundane menu of grilled everything and ordered a pot of Darjeeling and a toasted tea cake from a middle-aged waitress wearing retro spectacles. She said, "Got it, luv," and waited for my order, tapping her pencil against her pad. I ordered the same although I wasn't hungry. She took herself off to fetch it. It wasn't a mealtime, so there were few people in the restaurant and no one at all near our table. We were next to a window, though, and Raphael directed his attention outside, where a man was struggling to unhook a blanket from the wheels of a push chair while a woman with a toddler in her arms gesticulated and gave him instructions. I said, "It feels like night in my memory, when Sonia drowned. But if that's the case, what were you doing at the house? Dad told me you were there." "It was late afternoon when she drowned, half past five, nearly six. I'd stayed to make some phone calls." "Dad said you were probably contacting Juilliard that day." "I wanted you to be able to attend once they'd made you the offer, so I was lining up support for the idea. It was inconceivable to me that anyone would think of turning down Juilliard ' "How had they heard of me? I'd done those few concerts, but I don't remember actually applying to go there. I just remember being invited to attend." "I'd written to them. I'd sent them tapes. Reviews. A piece that Radio Times did on you. They were interested and invited the application, which I filled out." "Did Dad know about this?" Again, the perspiration speckled his forehead, and this time he used one of the napkins on the table to mop it up. He said, "I wanted to present the invitation as a fait accompli because I thought that if I had the invitation in hand, your father would agree to your attending." "But there wasn't the money, was there?" I concluded grimly. And just for a moment, oddly enough, I felt it again, that searing disappointment bordering on fury to know as an eight-year-old that Juilliard was not and would never be available to me because of money, because in our lives there never was nearly enough money to live. Raphael's next words surprised me, then. "Money was never the issue. We would have come up with it eventually. I was always certain of that. And they'd offered a scholarship for your tuition. But your father wouldn't hear of your going. He didn't want to separate the family. I assumed his main concern was leaving his parents, and I offered to take you to New York on my own, allowing everyone else to remain here in London, but he wouldn't accept that solution either." "So it wasn't financial? Because I'd thought ' "No. Ultimately, it wasn't financial." I must have looked either confused or betrayed by this information because Raphael continued, saying quickly, "Your father believed you didn't need Juilliard, Gideon. It's a compliment to us both, I suppose. He thought you could get the instruction you needed right here in London and he believed you 'd succeed without a move to New York. And time proved him right. Look where you are today." "Yes. Just look," I said ironically, as Raphael fell into the same trap that I'd fallen into myself, Dr. Rose. Look where I am today, huddled into the window seat in my music room where the last thing made in the room is music. I'm scribbling random thoughts in an effort that I don't quite believe in, trying to recall life details that my subconscious has judged as better forgotten. And now I'm discovering that even some of the details that I do dredge up out of my memory like the invitation to Juilliard and what prevented me from accepting it are not accurate. If that's the case, what can I rely on, Dr. Rose? You'll know, you answer quietly. But I ask how you can be so sure. The facts of my past seem more and more like moving targets to me, and they're scurrying past a background of faces that I haven't seen in years. So are they actual facts, Dr. Rose, or are they merely what I wish the facts to be? I said to Raphael, "Tell me what happened when Sonia drowned. That night. That afternoon. What happened? Getting Dad to talk about it.. ."I shook my head. The waitress returned with our tea and tea cakes spread across a plastic tray that, in keeping with the overall theme of the zoo, was painted to look like something else, in this case wood. She arranged cups, saucers, plates, and pots to her liking, and I waited till she had gone before I went on. "Dad won't say much. If I want to talk about music, the violin, that's fine. That looks like progress. If I want to go in another direction .. . He'll go, but it's hell for him. I can see that much." "It was hell for everyone." "Katja Wolff included?" "Her hell came afterwards, I dare say. She couldn't have been anticipating the judge recommending she serve twenty years." "Is that why at the trial.. . I read that she jumped up and tried to make a statement once he'd passed sentence." "Did she?" he asked. "I didn't know. I wasn't there on the day of the verdict. I'd had enough at that point." "You went with her to the police station, though. In the beginning. There was that picture of the two of you coming out." "I expect that was coincidence. The police had everyone down for questioning at one time or another. Most of us more than once." "Sarah-Jane Beckett as well?" "I expect so. Why?" "I need to see her." Raphael had buttered his tea cake and raised it to his mouth, but he didn't take a bite. Instead, he watched me over the top of it. "What's that going to accomplish, Gideon?" "It's just the direction I think I should go. And that's what Dr. Rose suggested, following my instincts, looking for connections, trying to find anything that will jar loose memories." "Your father's not going to be pleased." "So take your telephone off the hook." Raphael took a substantial bite of the tea cake, no doubt covering his chagrin at having been found out. But what else would he expect me to assume other than that he and Dad are having daily conversations about my progress or lack thereof? They are, after all, the two people most involved with what has happened to me, and aside from Libby and you, Dr. Rose, they are the only two who know the extent of my troubles. "What do you expect to gain from seeing Sarah-Jane Beckett, assuming you can even find her?" "She's in Cheltenham," I told him. "She's been there for years. I get a card from her on my birthday and at Christmas. Don't you?" "All right. She's in Cheltenham," he said, ignoring my question. "How can she help?" "I don't know. Maybe she can tell me why Katja Wolff wouldn't talk about what happened." "She had a right to silence, Gideon." He placed his tea cake on his plate and took up his cup, which he held in both hands as if warming them. "In court, right. With the police, right. She didn't have to talk. But with her solicitor? With her barrister? Why not talk to them?" "She wasn't fluent in English. Someone might have explained her right to silence and she could have misunderstood." "And that brings up something else I don't understand," I told him. "If she was foreign, why did she serve her time in England? Why wasn't she sent back to Germany?" "She fought repatriation through the courts, and she won." "How do you know?" "How could I help knowing? It was in all the newspapers at the time. She was like Myra Hindley: Every legal move she made from behind bars was scrutinised by the media. It was a nasty case, Gideon. It was a brutal case. It destroyed your parents, it killed both your grandparents within three years, and it damn well might have ruined you had not every effort in the world been made to keep you out of it. So to dig it all up now.. . all these years afterwards .. ." He set down his cup and added more tea to it. He said, "You aren't touching your food." "I'm not hungry." "When did you last have a meal? You look like hell. Eat the tea cake. Or at least drink the tea." "Raphael, what if Katja Wolff didn't drown Sonia?" He put the teapot back on the table. He took the sugar and added a packet to his cup, following this with the milk. It came to me then that he did it all in reverse of the usual order. He said once the pouring and sugaring was done, "It hardly makes sense that she'd keep quiet if she hadn't killed Sonia, Gideon." "Perhaps she suspected that the police would twist her words. Or the Crown prosecutors, should she have stood in the witness box." "They might have done, all of them, yes. Indeed. But her solicitor and her barrister would have been unlikely to twist her words should she have seen fit to give them any." "Did my father make her pregnant?" He'd lifted his cup, but he set it back on its saucer. He looked out of the window where the couple with the push chair had now unloaded it of a bag, two baby bottles, and a pack of disposable nappies. They'd turned the chair on its side and the man was attacking the wheel with the heel of his shoe. Raphael said quietly, "That has nothing to do with the problem," and I knew he was not speaking about the blanket that continued to make the push chair impossible to roll forward. "How can you say that? How can you know? Did he make her pregnant? And is that what destroyed my parents' marriage?" "Only the people within a marriage can say what destroyed it." "All right. Accepted. And as to the rest? Did he make Katja pregnant?" "What does he say? Have you asked him?" "He says no. But he would do, wouldn't he?" "So you've had your answer." "Then who?" "Perhaps the lodger. James Pitchford was in love with her. The day she walked into your parents' house, James fell hard and he never recovered." "But I thought James and Sarah-Jane.. . I remember them together, James the Lodger and Sarah-Jane. From the window, I saw them heading out in the evening. And whispering together in the kitchen, like intimates." "That would have been before Katja, I expect." "Why?" "Because after Katja arrived, James spent most of his free hours with her." "So Katja displaced Sarah-Jane in more than one way." 'you could say that, yes, and I see where you're heading. But she was with James Pitchford when Sonia drowned. And James confirmed that. He had no reason to lie for her. If he was going to lie for anyone back then, he would have lied for the woman he loved. In fact, had Sarah-Jane not been with James when Sonia was murdered, I expect James would have gladly given Katja an alibi that would have made her seem merely derelict in her duties and consequently responsible for a tragic death, but not a malevolent one." "And as it was, it was murder," I said reflectively. "When all the facts were presented, yes." Gideon 25 OCTOBER When all the facts were presented, Raphael Robson said. And that's what I'm looking for, isn't it, an accurate presentation of the facts. You don't reply. Instead, you keep your face expressionless as you no doubt were instructed to do as a psychiatric intern or whatever it was that you were as a student, and you wait for me to offer an explanation for why I have veered so decidedly into this area. Seeing this, I flounder for words and I begin to question myself. I examine the motive for what might prompt me to engage in displacement as you would call it and I admit to every one of my fears. What are they? you ask. You already know what they are, Dr. Rose. I suspect, you say, I consider, I speculate, and I wonder, but I do not know. You're the only one who knows, Gideon. All right. I accept that. And to show you how wholeheartedly I accept that, I'll name them for you: fear of crowds, fear of being trapped in the underground, fear of excessive speed, complete terror of snakes. All fairly common fears, you note. As are fear of failure, fear of my father's disapproval, fear of enclosed spaces You raise an eyebrow at that, a momentary lapse in your lack of expression. Yes, I'm afraid to be enclosed and I see how that relates to relationships, Dr. Rose. I'm afraid of being suffocated by someone, which fear in and of itself indicates a larger fear of being intimate with a woman. With anyone, for that matter. But this is hardly news to me. I've had years to consider how and why and at what point my affair with Beth fell completely apart and believe me I've had plenty of opportunities to dwell on my lack of response to Libby. So if I know and admit my fears and take them out into the sunlight and shake them like dusters, how can you or Dad or anyone else accuse me of displacing them onto an unhealthy interest in my sister's death and its consequences? I'm not accusing you of anything, Gideon, you say, clasping your hands in your lap. Are you, however, accusing yourself? Of what? Perhaps you can tell me. Oh, I see that game. And I know where you want me to head. It's where everyone wants me to head, everyone save Libby, that is. You want me to head to the music, Dr. Rose, to talk about the music, to delve into the music. Only if that's where you want to go, you say. And if I don't want to go there? We might talk about why. You see? You're trying to trick me. If you can get me to admit.. . What? you ask when I hesitate, and your voice is as soft as goose down. Stay within the fear, you tell me. Fear is only a feeling; it is not a fact. But the fact is that I cannot play. And the fear is of the music. All music? Oh, you know the answer to that, Dr. Rose. You know it's fear of one piece in particular. You know how The Archduke haunts my life. And you know that once Beth suggested it as our performance piece, I could not refuse. Because it was Beth who made the suggestion, not Sherrill. Had it been Sherrill, I could have tossed out a "Choose something else', without a thought because even though Sherrill has no jinx himself and consequently might have questioned my rejection of The Archduke, the fact is that Sherrill's talent is such that for him to make the shift from one piece to another is so simple that to question it would have taken more energy than he'd have wished to expend on the matter. But Beth is not like Sherrill, Dr. Rose, either in talent or in laissez-faire. Beth had already prepared The Archduke, so Beth would have questioned. And questioning, she may have connected my failure to play The Archduke with that other more significant failure of mine with which she was once all too familiar. So I didn't ask for a different choice of music. I decided to confront the jinx head-on. And put to the test of that confrontation, I failed. Before that? you ask. Before what? Before the performance at Wigmore Hall. You must have rehearsed. We did. Of course. And you played it then? We would hardly have mounted a public concert of three instruments had one of them And you played it without difficulty then? During rehearsal? I've never played it without difficulty, Dr. Rose. Either in private or in rehearsal, I've never played it without a bout of nerves, of burning in the gut, of pounding in the head, of sickness that makes me cling to the toilet for an hour first, and all that and I'm not even performing it publicly. So what about the Wigmore night? you ask me. Did you have that same reaction to The Archduke before Wigmore Hall? And I hesitate. I see how your eyes spark with interest at my hesitation: evaluating, deciding, choosing whether to press forward now or to wait and let my realisations and admissions come when they will. Because I did not suffer before that performance. And I haven't registered that until now. 26 OCTOBER I've been to Cheltenham. Sarah-Jane Beckett is Sarah-Jane Hamilton now and has been Hamilton for the last twelve years. She's not much changed physically since she was my teacher: She's put on a bit of weight but she's still not developed breasts, and her hair is as red as it was when we lived in the same household. It's a different style she wears it held off her face with a hair band but it's straight as a poker as it always was. The first thing I noticed that's different about her now was her manner of dress. She's apparently moved away from the sorts of clothes she wore as my teacher which were heavily given to floppy collars and lace, as I recall and she's advanced to skirts, twin sets and pearls. The second thing I noticed that's different was her fingernails, which are no longer bitten to the quick with chewed up cuticles but are instead long and bright with polish, the better to show off a sapphire and diamond ring that's the size of a small African nation. I noticed her fingernails because whilst we were together, she made a great job of waving her hands when she spoke, as if she wanted me to see how far she'd advanced in good fortune. The means to her good fortune wasn't at home when I arrived in Cheltenham. Sarah-Jane was in the front garden of their house -which is in a very smart neighbourhood where Mercedes-Benzes and Range Rovers appear to be the vehicles of choice and she was filling an enormous bird feeder with seed, standing on a three-step ladder and pouring from a weighty bag. I didn't want to startle her, so I said nothing till she was off the steps and rearranging her twin set as well as patting her chest to make sure the pearls were still in place. That was when I called her name, and after she greeted me with surprise and pleasure, she told me that Perry husband and provider of largesse was on business in Manchester and would be disappointed to discover upon his return that he'd missed my visit. "He's heard enough about you over the years," she said. "But I expect he's never believed that I actually know you." And here she trilled a little laugh that made me distinctly uncomfortable although I could not tell you why except to say that laughs like that never sound genuine to me. She said, "Come in. Come in. Will you have coffee? Tea? A drink?" She led the way into the house where everything was so tasteful that only an interior decorator could have managed it: just the right furniture, just the right colours, just the right objets d' art, subtle lighting designed to flatter, and a touch of homeliness in the careful selection of family photographs. She snatched up one on her way to make our coffee and she thrust it at me. "Perry," she said. "His girls and ours. They're with their mother most of the time. We have them every other weekend. Alternate holidays and half terms. The modern British family, you know." Again that laugh and she disappeared behind a swinging door through which, I assumed, the kitchen lay. Alone, I found myself looking at the family in a studio portrait. The absent but seated Perry was surrounded by five women: his wife sitting next to him, two older daughters behind him with one hand each upon his shoulders, one smaller girl leaning into Sarah-Jane and the last smaller still upon Perry's knee. He had that look of satisfaction that I can only assume comes when a man successfully creates offspring. The older girls looked bored to tears, the younger girls looked winsome, and Sarah-Jane looked excessively pleased. She popped back out of the kitchen as I was replacing the picture on the table from which she'd fetched it. She said, "Step-mothering is rather like teaching: It's a case of constantly encouraging without ever being actually free to say what one really thinks. And always there are the parents to contend with, in this case their mother. She drinks, I'm afraid." "Is that how it was with me?" "Good heavens, your mother didn't drink." "I meant the rest: not being able to say what you think." "One learns diplomacy," she said. "This is my Angelique." She indicated the child on Perry's knee. "And this is Anastasia. She has something of a talent for music herself." I waited for her to identify the older girls. When she did not, I asked the obligatory question about Anastasia's choice of instrument. Harp, I was told. Suitable, I thought. Sarah-Jane had always possessed an air of the Regency about her, as if she'd somehow been a displaced person from a Jane Austen novel, more fitted for a life of writing letters, doing lacework, and creating inoffensive water colours than for the scramble and dash of existence enjoyed by women today. I couldn't envisage Sarah-Jane Beckett Hamilton jogging through Regent's Park with a mobile phone pressed to her ear any more than I could see her fighting fires, mining coal, or crewing a yacht in the Fastnet Race. So steering her eldest natural daughter towards the harp rather than something like the electric guitar was a logical act of parental guidance on her part, and I had no doubt she'd employed it deftly once the girl had decided she wanted to play an instrument. "Of'course, she's not in your league," Sarah-Jane said, presenting me with another photograph, this one of Anastasia at her harp, arms raised gracefully so that her hands stubby, unfortunately, like her mother's could pluck the strings. "But she does well enough. I hope you'll hear her sometime. When you have the time, naturally." And she trilled her gay little laugh again. "I do so wish Perry were here to meet you, Gideon. Are you in town for a concert?" I told her that I wasn't there for a concert but I didn't add the rest. She'd obviously not seen any accounts of the incident in Wigmore Hall, and the less that I had to delve into that with Sarah-Jane, the better I would feel about it. Instead, I told her that I was hoping to talk to her about my sister's death and the trial that followed. She said, "Ah. Yes. I see." And she sat on a plump sofa the colour of newly cut grass and motioned me over to an armchair whose fabric featured a muted autumn hunting scene with dogs and deer. I waited for the logical questions to come. Why? Why now? Why dig up all that is past, Gideon? But they did not come, which I found curious. Instead, Sarah-Jane composed herself, her legs crossed at the ankles, her hands lying one on top of the other with the sapphired one on top and her expression perfectly attentive and not the least guarded, as I'd come to expect. "What is it you'd like to know?" she asked. "Anything you can tell me. About Katja Wolff, mainly. About what she was like, what living in the same house with her was like." "Yes. Of course." Sarah-Jane sat quietly, gathering her thoughts. Finally, she began by saying, "Well, it was obvious from the first that she didn't belong in the position as your sister's nanny. It was a mistake for your parents to employ her, but they didn't see that before it was too late." "I've been told she was fond of Sonia." "Oh fond of her, yes. It was very easy to be fond of Sonia. She was a fragile little thing and she was fractious well, what child wouldn't be, in that condition? but she was terribly sweet and quite precious as infant after all, and who finds it impossible to be fond of a baby? But she had other things on her mind, did Katja, and they got in the way of her devotion to Sonia. And devotion is what's required with children, Gideon. Fondness won't get you through the first bout of wilfulness or tears." "What sort of things?" "She wasn't serious about child care It was a means to an end for her. She wanted to be a fashion designer although God only knows why, considering the bizarre ensembles she put together for herself -and she intended to stay in your parents' employ only as long as it took her to save the money she needed for .. . for wherever it was that she intended to be trained. So there was that." "What else?" "Celebrity." "She wanted fame?" "She had fame already: The Girl Who Made it Over the Berlin Wall As Her Lover Died in Her Arms." "Died in her arms?" "Hmm. Yes. That's how she told the tale. She had a scrap book, mind you, of all the interviews she'd done with newspapers and magazines from round the world after that escape, and to hear her tell the story was to be asked to believe that she'd designed and inflated the balloon on her own, which I seriously doubt was the case. I always said it was a lucky turn of events that made her the only survivor of that escape. Had the boy lived and what was his name? Georg? Klaus? - I've little doubt he would have told an entirely different tale about whose idea it was and who did the work. So she came to England with her head swollen, and it got larger during the year she spent at the Convent of the Immaculate Conception. More interviews, lunch with the Lord Mayor, a private audience at Buckingham Palace. She was ill-prepared psychologically to fade into the woodwork as your sister's nanny. And as for being physically and mentally prepared for what she was going to have to face not to mention temperamentally suited .. . She wasn't. Not in the least." "So she' was destined to fail," I remarked quietly, and I must have sounded contemplative because Sarah-Jane appeared to reach a conclusion about what I was thinking, and she hastened to make an adjustment. "I don't mean to imply that your parents hired her because she was ill-prepared, Gideon. That wouldn't be an accurate assessment of the situation at all. And it might even go so far as to suggest that.. . Well, never mind. No." "Yet it was obvious right off that she couldn't handle the responsibility?" "Only if you were looking was it obvious," she replied. "And certainly, you and I were thrown together with Katfa and the baby more than anyone else, so we could see and hear .. . And we were in the house the four of us far more than your parents, both of whom worked. So we saw more. Or at least I did." "What about my grandparents? Where were they?" "It's true that your granddad hung about a lot. He rather fancied Katja, so he kept her under his eye. But he wasn't actually altogether there, was he, if you understand my meaning? So he could hardly be prepared to report on anything irregular that he saw." "Irregular?" "Sonia's crying going unattended to. Katja's absences from the house when the baby was having a nap in the middle of the day. Telephone conversations during your sister's mealtimes. A general impatience with the baby when she was difficult. Those sorts of things that are questionable and disturbing while not being out-and-out grossly negligent." "Did you tell anyone?" "Indeed. I told your mother." "What about Dad?" Sarah-Jane gave a little bounce on the sofa. She said, "The coffee! I'd quite forgotten .. ." And she excused herself and hurried from the room. What about Dad? The room was so quiet, and the neighbourhood outside was so quiet, that my question seemed to bounce off the walls like an echo in a canyon. What about Dad? I got up from my chair and went to one of the two display cabinets that stood on either side of the fireplace. I examined its contents: four shelves filled with antique dolls of all shapes and sizes, representing everything from infants to adults, all of them dressed in period clothes, perhaps from the period during which the dolls themselves had been manufactured. I know nothing of dolls, so I had no idea what I was looking at, but I could tell that the collection was impressive: by the numbers, the quality of the dress, and the condition of the toys themselves, which was pristine. Some of them looked as if they'd never actually been handled by a child, and I wondered if Sarah-Jane's own daughters or step-daughters had ever stood before this case or the other, gazing wistfully at what they could never themselves possess. Sarah-Jane re-entered bearing a large tray on which she'd assembled an ornate silver coffee pot with a matching sugar bowl and cream jug. She'd accompanied this with porcelain coffee cups, small coffee spoons, and a plate of ginger biscuits that were, she confided, "Home made, just this morning." Unaccountably, I found myself wondering how Libby would react to all this: to the dolls, to the coffee presentation, to Sarah-jane Beckett Hamilton herself, and most of all to what she had said so far and what she had avoided saying. On a coffee table, she set down the tray and did the pouring. She said, "I was less than charitable about Katja's manner of dress just now. I do that sometimes. You must forgive me. I spend so much time alone Perry travels, as I've said, and the girls are at school, of course that I forget to monitor my tongue on the odd occasion when someone comes to call. What I should have said was that she had no experience with fashion or colour or design, having grown up in East Germany. And what would one actually expect from someone from an eastern bloc country, haute couture? So it was admirable, really, that she even had the ambition to go to college and learn fashion design. It was just unfortunate it was tragic, really that she brought both her dreams and her inexperience with children into your parents' home. That was a deadly combination. Sugar? Milk?" I took the cup from her. I was not about to be sidetracked into a discussion of Katja Wolff's clothes, I said, "Did Dad know that she was derelict in her duties towards Sonia?" Sarah-Jane took up her own cup and stirred the coffee although she'd put nothing in it to require stirring. "Your mother would have told him, naturally." "But you didn't." "Having reported to one parent, I didn't think it would be necessary to report it to the other. And your mother was more often in the house, Gideon. Your father was rarely about as he had more than one job, as you may recall. Have a ginger biscuit. Do you still have a fondness for sweets? How funny. I've just recalled that Katja had a real passion for them. For chocolates, especially. Well, I suppose that comes of growing up in an eastern bloc country as well. Deprivation." "Had she any other passions?" "Any other .. . ?" Sarah-jane looked perplexed. "I know she was pregnant, and I've remembered seeing her in the garden with a man. I couldn't see him clearly, but I could tell what they were doing. Raphael says it was James Pitch ford, the lodger." "I hardly think so!" Sarah-Jane protested. "James and Katja? Heavens!" Then she laughed. "James Pitch ford wasn't involved with Katja. What would make you think that? He helped her with her English, it's true, but apart from that .. . Well, James always had something of an air of indifference towards women, Gideon. One was forced to wonder about his ... if I might say it .. . his sexual orientation at the end of the day. No, no. Katja wouldn't have been involved with James Pitch ford." She took up another ginger biscuit. "One naturally tends to think that when a group of adults live under one roof and when one of the female adults becomes pregnant, another of the co habitants must be the father. I suppose it's logical, but in this case.. . ? It wasn't James. It couldn't have been your grandfather. And who else is there? Well, Raphael, of course. He could have been the pot calling the kettle black when he named James Pitch ford." "What about my father?" She looked disconcerted. "You can't possibly think your father and Katja .. . Certainly you would have recognised your own father had he been the man you saw with her, Gideon. And even if you hadn't recognised him for some reason, he was completely devoted to your mother." "But the fact that they separated within two years after Sonia died "That had to do with the death itself, with your mother's inability to cope afterwards. She went into a very black period after your sister was murdered well, what mother wouldn't? and she never pulled herself out of it. No. You mustn't think ill of your father on any account. I won't hear of that." "But when she wouldn't name the father of her child .. . when she wouldn't talk at all about anything to do with my sister ' "Gideon, listen to me." Sarah-Jane set down her coffee, placing the remainder of her biscuit on the saucer's edge. "Your father might have admired Katja Wolff's physical beauty as all men did. He might have spent the odd hour now and again alone with her. He might have chuckled fondly at her mistakes in English, and he might have bought her a gift at Christmas and two on her birthday .. . But none of that means he was her lover. You must drive that idea straight from your mind." "Yet not to talk to anyone.. . I know Katja Wolff never said a word about anything, and that doesn't make sense." "To us, no. It doesn't," Sarah-Jane agreed. "But you must remember that Katja was headstrong. I've little doubt that she'd got it into her mind that she could say nothing and all would be well. To her way of thinking and coming from a communist country where criminal science isn't what it is in England how could she think otherwise? iv hat evidence had they that couldn't be argued away? She could claim to have been called to the telephone briefly although why she would claim something that could be so easily disproved is far beyond me -with a tragic accident being the result. How was she to know what else would become public that, taken in conjunction with Sonia's death, would serve to prove her guilt?" "What else did become public? Beyond the pregnancy and the lie about the phone call and the row she'd had with my parents. What else?" "Aside from the other, healed injuries to your sister? Well, there was her character, for one thing. Her callous disregard for her own family in East Germany. What happened to them as a result of her escape. Someone did some digging round in Germany after her arrest. It was in the papers. Don't you recall?" She took up her cup again and poured herself more coffee. She didn't notice that I had not yet touched mine. "But no. You wouldn't have done, would you? Every effort was made never to talk about the case in front of you, and I doubt you saw the papers, so how would you remember or even know in the first place that her family had been tracked down God knows how although the East Germans were probably happy to offer the information as a caveat for anyone who might think of escaping .. ." "What happened to them?" I pressed. "Her parents lost their jobs, and her siblings their university places. And had Katja she'd a single tear about any of her family while she was in Kensington Square? Had she tried to contact them or help them? No. She never even mentioned them. They might not have existed for her." "Did she have friends, then?" "Hmmm. There was that fat girl who always had her mind in the gutter. I remember her last name Waddington because it reminded me of waddle which is how she walked." "Was that a girl called Katie?" "Yes. Yes, that was it. Katie Waddington. Katja knew her from the convent and when she moved in with your parents, this Waddington -Katie hung about quite regularly. Usually eating something well, just consider her size and always going on about Freud. And sex. She was obsessed with sex. With Freud and sex. With sex and Freud. The significance of orgasm, the resolution of the Oedipal drama, the gratification of childhood's unfulfilled and forbidden wishes, the role of sex as a catalyst for change, the sexual enslavement of women by men and men by women .. ." Sarah-Jane leaned forward and took up the coffee pot, smiling at me and saying, "Another? Oh, but you haven't touched a drop yet, have you? Here, then. Let me pour you a fresh one." And before I could reply, she snatched up my coffee cup and disappeared into the kitchen, leaving me with my thoughts: about celebrity and the abrupt loss of it, about the destruction of immediate family, about the possession of dreams and the crucial ability to delay the immediate fulfilment of those dreams, about physical beauty and the lack thereof, about lying out of malice and telling the truth for the very same reason. When Sarah-Jane came into the room, I had my question ready. "What happened the night my sister died? I remember this: I remember the emergency people arriving, the paramedics or whoever they were. I remember us you and me in my bedroom while they were working on Sonia. I remember people crying. I think I remember Katja's voice. But that's all. What actually happened?" "Surely your father can give you a far better answer to that than I. You've asked him, I take it?" "It's difficult for him to talk about that time." "Naturally, it would be .. . But as for me .. ." She fingered her pearls. "Sugar? Milk? You must try my coffee." And when I obliged her by raising the bitter brew to my mouth, she said, "I can't add much, I'm afraid. I was in my room when it happened. I'd been preparing your lessons for the following day and I'd just popped into James's room to ask him to help me devise a scheme that would get you interested in weights and measures. Since he was a man well, is a man, assuming he's still alive and there's certainly no reason to assume otherwise, is there? - I thought he'd be able to suggest some activity that would intrigue a little boy who was And here she winked at me 'not always cooperative when it came to learning something he thought was unrelated to his music. So James and I were going over some ideas when we heard the commotion downstairs: shouting and pounding feet and doors slamming We went running down and saw everyone in the corridor ' "Everyone?" "Yes. Everyone. Your mother, your father, Katja, Raphael Robson, your grandmother .. ." "What about Granddad?" "I don't .. . Well, he must have been there. Unless, of course, he was .. . well, out in the country for one of his rests? No, no, he must have been there, Gideon. Because there was such shouting going on, and I remember your grandfather as something of a shouter. At any rate, I was told to take you into your bedroom and stay with you there, so that's what I did. When the emergency services arrived, they told everyone else to get out of the way. Only your parents stayed. And we could still hear them from your room, you and I." "I don't remember any of it," I said. "Just the part in my room." "That's just as well, Gideon. You were a little boy. Seven? Eight?" "Eight." "Well, how many of us have explicit, full memories even of good times from when we were children? And this was a terrible, shocking time. I dare say forgetting it was a blessing, dear." "You said you wouldn't leave. I remember that." "Of course I wouldn't have left you alone in the middle of what was going on!" "No. I mean, you said that you wouldn't be leaving as my teacher. Dad told me he'd sacked you." She coloured at that, a deep crimson that was the child of her red hair, hair that was dyed to its original hue now that she was approaching fifty. "There was a shortage of money, Gideon." Her voice was fainter than it had been. "Right. Sorry. I know. I didn't mean to imply .. . Obviously, he wouldn't have kept you on till I was sixteen if you'd been anything less than extraordinary as my teacher." "Thank you." Her reply was formal in the extreme. Either she had been wounded by my words or she wanted me to think so. And believe me, Dr. Rose, I could see how my believing I'd wounded her could serve to direct the course of the conversation. But I chose to eschew that direction, saying, "What were you doing before you asked James for his advice on the weights and measures activity?" "That evening? As I said, I was planning your lessons for the following day." She didn't add the rest but her face told me she knew I'd appended the information myself: She had been alone in her room before she asked James to help her. Chapter Fifteen The ringing forced Lynley to swim upwards, out of a deep sleep. He opened his eyes into the darkness of the bedroom and flailed out for the alarm clock, cursing when he knocked it to the floor without managing to silence it. Next to him, Helen didn't stir. Even when he switched on the light, she continued to sleep. That had long been her gift and it remained so, even in pregnancy: She always slept like an effigy in a Gothic cathedral. He blinked, became semi-conscious, and realised it was the phone and not the alarm. He saw the time three-forty in the morning and knew that the news wasn't good. Assistant Commissioner Sir David Hillier was on the line. He barked, "Charing Cross Hospital. Malcolm's been hit by a car." Lynley said, "What? Malcolm? What?" Hillier said, "Wake up, Inspector. Rub ice cubes over your face if necessary. Malcolm's in the operating theatre. Get down here. I want you on this. Now." "When? What's happened?" "God damn bastard didn't even stop," Hillier said, and his voice -uncharacteristically torn and sounding completely unlike the urbane and measured political tones that the AC usually employed at New Scotland Yard illustrated the level of his concern. Hit by a car. Bastard didn't stop. Lynley was instantly fully awake, as if a mixture of caffeine and adrenaline had been shot into his heart. He said, "Where? When?" "Charing Cross Hospital. Get down here, Lynley." And Hillier rang off. Lynley bolted from the bed and grabbed the first items of clothing that came to hand. He scrawled a note to his wife in lieu of waking her, giving her the bare details. He added the time and left the note on his pillow. Thrusting one arm into his overcoat, he went out into the night. The earlier wind had died altogether, but the cold was unremitting and it had begun to rain. Lynley turned his coat collar up and jogged round the corner to the mews where he kept the Bentley in a locked garage. He tried not to think about Hillier's terse message or the tone with which it had been given. He didn't want to make an interpretation of the facts till he had the facts, but he couldn't stop himself from making the leap anyway. One hit and run. And now another. Despite its narrowness and its daytime congestion, he assumed there would be little traffic on the King's Road at this time of night, so he headed directly for Sloane Square, coursed half way round the leaf-clogged fountain in its centre, and shot past Peter Jones where in a bow to the growing commercialism of their society Christmas decorations had long since been twinkling from its windows. He flew past the trendy shops of Chelsea, past the silent streets of dignified terraces. He saw a uniformed constable squatting to talk to a blanket-shrouded figure in the doorway of the town hall the disenfranchised homeless yet another sign of their disparate times but that was the only life he encountered beyond the few cars he passed on his flight towards Hammersmith. Just short of King's College, he made a turn to the right, and he began to cut across and upwards to reach Lillie Road, which would take him closest to Charing Cross Hospital. When he zoomed into the car park and set off to casualty at a sprint, he finally allowed himself a look at his watch. It had been less than twenty minutes since he'd taken Hillier's call. The AC as unshaven and dishevelled as Lynley himself was in the waiting area of the casualty ward, speaking tersely to a uniformed constable while three others clustered uneasily nearby. He caught sight of Lynley and flicked a finger at the uniform to dismiss him. As the constable rejoined his colleagues, Hillier strode to meet Lynley in the middle of the room. Despite the hour, rain made casualty a busy place. Someone called out, "Another ambulance coming from Earl's Court," which suggested what the next five minutes were going to be like in the immediate vicinity, and Hillier took Lynley by the arm, leading him beyond casualty, down several corridors, and up several flights of stairs. He said nothing till they were in a private waiting area that served the families of those undergoing surgery in the operating theatre. No one else was there. Lynley said, "Where's Frances? She's not ' "Randie phoned us," Hillier cut in. "Round one-fifteen." "Miranda? What happened?" "Frances phoned her in Cambridge. Malcolm wasn't home. Frances'd gone to bed and she woke up with the dog barking outside in a frenzy. She found him in the front garden with the lead on his collar, but Malcolm not with him. She panicked, phoned Randie. Randie phoned us. By the time we got to Frances, the hospital had him in casualty and had rung her. Frances thought he'd had a heart attack while walking the dog. She still doesn't know.. ." Hillier blew out a breath. "We couldn't get her out of the house. We got her to the door, even had it open, Laura on one arm and myself on the other. But the night air hit her and that was it. She got hysterical. The bloody dog went mad." Hillier took out a handkerchief and passed it over his face. Lynley realised that this moment constituted the first time he'd seen the assistant commissioner even slightly undone. He said, "How bad is it?" "They've gone into his brain to clear out a clot from beneath the skull fracture. There's swelling, so they're dealing with that as well. They're doing something with a monitor ... I don't remember what. It's about the pressure. They do something with a monitor to keep note of the pressure. Do they put it in his brain? I don't know." He shoved his handkerchief away, clearing his throat roughly. "God," he said and stared in front of him. Lynley said, "Sir .. . Can I get you a coffee?" and felt all the awkwardness of the offer as he spoke it. There were gallons of bad blood between himself and the assistant commissioner. Hillier had never made an effort to hide his antipathy for Lynley, and Lynley himself had never seen fit to disguise the disdain he felt for Hillier's rapacious pursuit of promotion. Seeing him like this, however, in an instance of vulnerability as Hillier confronted what had happened to his brother-in-law and friend of more than twenty-five years, painted Hillier in a different shade than previously. But Lynley wasn't sure what to do with the picture. "They've said they're probably going to have to take out most of his spleen," Hillier said. "They think they can save the liver, perhaps half of it. But they don't know yet." "Is he still ' "Uncle David!" Miranda Webberly's arrival broke into Lynley's question. She flew through the door to the waiting area, wearing a baggy track suit with her curly hair pulled back and held in place with a knotted scarf. She was bare of foot and white in the face. She had a set of car keys clutched in her hand. She made a beeline for her uncle's arms. "You got someone to drive you?" he asked her. "I borrowed a car from one of the girls. I drove myself." "Randie, I told you ' "Uncle David." And to Lynley, "Have you seen him, Inspector?" And then back to her uncle without waiting for an answer, "How is he? Where's Mum? She's not.. . ? Oh God. She wouldn't come, would she?" Miranda's eyes were bright liquid as she went on bitterly, saying, "Of course not, of course not," in a broken voice. "Your aunt Laura's with her," Hillier said. "Come over here, Randie. Sit down. Where're your shoes?" Miranda looked down at her feet blankly. "God, I've come without them, Uncle David. How is he?" Hillier told her what he'd told Lynley, everything except the fact that the accident was a hit and run. He was just reaching the part about attempting to save the superintendent's liver when a doctor in surgical garb pushed through the doorway, saying "Webberly?" He surveyed all three of them with the bloodshot eyes of a man who wasn't bearing good news. Hillier identified himself, introduced Randie and Lynley, put his arm round his niece, and said, "What's happened?" The surgeon said Webberly was in recovery and he'd go from there straight to intensive care where he would be kept in a chemically induced coma to rest the brain. Steroids would be used to ease the swelling there, barbiturates to render him unconscious. He'd be paralysed with muscle anaesthetics to keep him immobile until his brain recovered. Randie seized upon the final word. "So he'll be all right? Dad'll be all right?" They didn't know, the surgeon told her. His condition was critical. With cerebral oedema, it was always touch and go. One had to be vigilant with the swelling, to keep the brain from pushing down on its stem. "What about the liver and the spleen?" Hillier asked. "We've saved what we could. There're several fractures as well, but those are secondary in comparison to the rest." "May I see him?" Randie asked. "You're .. . ?" "His daughter. He's my dad. May I see him?" "No other next of kin?" This the doctor asked Hillier. "She's ill," Hillier said. "Rotten luck," was the reply. The surgeon nodded at Randie, saying, "We'll let you know when he's out of recovery. It won't be for several hours, though. You'd be wise to get some rest." When he left, Randie turned to her uncle and Lynley, saying anxiously, "He won't die. That means he won't die. That's what it means." "He's alive right now, and that's what counts," her uncle told her, but he didn't say what Lynley knew he was thinking: Webberly might not die but he also might not recover, at least not to a degree that made him fit for something more than life as an invalid. Without wanting it to happen, Lynley found himself thrust back in time to another head injury, and another bout of pressure on the brain. That had left his own friend Simon St. James much in the state he was in today and the years that had passed since the man's long convalescence had not returned to him what Lynley's negligence had taken. Hillier settled Randie on a PVC sofa where a discarded hospital blanket marked another anxious relative's vigil. He said, "I'm going to fetch you some tea," and he indicated to Lynley that he was to follow. Out in the corridor, Hillier paused. He said, "You're acting superintendent till further notice. Put together a team to scour the city for the bastard that hit him." I've been working on a case that ' "Is there something wrong with your hearing?" Hillier cut in. "Drop that case. I want you on this one. Use whatever resources you need. Report to me every morning. Clear? The uniforms below will put you in the picture of what we've got so far, which is sod bloody all in a basket. A driver going the opposite direction got a glimpse of the car, but it didn't register beyond something large like a limo or a taxi cab. He thought the roof might be grey, but you can discount that. The reflection of street lights would have made it look grey and when was the last time you saw a two-tone car?" "Limo or taxi. Black vehicle, then," Lynley said. "I'm glad to see you haven't lost your remarkable powers of deduction." The jibe gave credence to how little Hillier actually wanted him involved in the case at hand. Hearing it, Lynley felt the old quick heat, felt his fingers draw inward to form a fist. But when he said, "Why me?" he did his best to make the question sound polite. "Because Malcolm would choose you if he were able to speak," Hillier told him. "And I intend to honour his wishes." "Then you think he won't make it." "I don't think anything." But the tremor in Hillier's voice gave the lie to his words. "So just get on to it. Drop what you're doing and get on to it now. Find this son of a bitch. Drag him in. There're houses along the road where he was hit. Someone out there has got to have seen something." "This may be related to what I'm working on already," Lynley said. "How the hell ' "Hear me out, if you will." Hillier listened as Lynley sketched in the details of the hit and run two nights earlier. It was another black car, he explained, and there was a connection between Detective Superintendent Malcolm Webberly and the victim. Lynley didn't spell out the exact nature of their connection. He merely let it suffice that an investigation from two decades in the past might well be what lay behind the two hit and runs. Hillier hadn't reached his level of command without his fair share of brains, however. He said incredulously, "The mother of the child and the chief investigating officer? If this is connected, who the hell would wait two decades to go after them?" "Someone who didn't know where they were till recently, I expect." "And you've someone likely among the group you're interviewing?" "Yes," Lynley said, after a moment's reflection. "I believe we may have." Yasmin Edwards sat on the edge of her son's bed and curved her hand round his small perfect shoulder. "C'me on, Danny. Time to get up." She gave him a shake. "Dan, din't you hear your alarm?" Daniel scowled and burrowed further beneath the covers so that his bottom made an appealing hillock in the bed that caught at Yasmin's heart. He said, "Jus' a more minute, Mum. Please. C'me on. Jus' a more minute." "No more minutes. They're adding up too fast. You'll be late for school. Or have to go without breakfast." "Tha's okay." "Not," she told him. She smacked his bum, then blew in his ear. "You don't get up, the kiss bugs're gonna go after you, lad." His lips curved in a smile although his eyes stayed closed. "Won't," he said. "Got m' bug killer on." "Bug killer? I think not. You can't kill a kiss bug. Just you watch and see." She descended on him and planted kisses on his cheek, his ear, and his neck. She began to tickle him as she kissed him, until he finally came fully awake. He giggled, kicked, and fought her off half-heartedly, crying, "Yech! No! Get them bugs off me, Mum!" "Can't," she said breathlessly. "Oh m'God, there's more, Dan. There's bugs crawling everywhere. I don't know what to do." She whipped back the covers and went for his stomach, crying, "Kiss, kiss, kiss," and revelling in what always seemed like the newness of her son's laughter despite the years that she'd been free. She'd had to teach him the kiss bug game all over again when she'd come out, and they had a lot of kisses to recapture. For being the victim of kiss bugs wasn't the sort of hardship a child in care ever had to endure. She lifted Daniel to a sitting position and rested him back against his Star Trek pillows. He caught his breath and ended his giggles, gazing at her with brown-eyed contentment. She felt her insides swelling and glowing when he looked at her like that. She said, "So what's for Christmas hols, Dan? "D you think about it like I told you?" "Disney World!" he crowed. "Orlando, Florida. We c'n go to the Magic Kingdom first and then the Epcot Center and after that Universal Studios. Then we can go to Miami Beach, Mum, and you c'n lay on the sand and I c'n surf in the sea." She smiled at him. "Disney World, is it? Where'd we get the dosh for that? You planning to rob a bank?" "I got money saved." "Do you? How much?" "I got twenty-five pounds." "Not a bad start, but not quite enough." "Mum .. ." He gave that two syllable expression of a child's disappointment. Yasmin hated to deny him anything after what the early years of his life had been like. She felt tugged in the direction of her son's desires. But she knew there was no sense in getting his hopes up or her own for that matter because there was more to consider than his will or hers when it came to how they were going to spend Daniel's Christmas holiday. "What about Katja? She wouldn't be able to go with us, Dan. She'd have to stay behind and work." "So? Why can't you 'n me go, Mum? Just you 'n me? Like before." "Because Katja's part of our family now. You know that." He scowled and turned away. "She's out there making your breakfast, she is," Yasmin said. "She's doing those little Dutch pancakes you fancy." "She c'n do what she wants," Daniel said. "Hey, luv." Yasmin bent over him. It was important to her that he understand. "Katja belongs here. She's my partner. You know what that means." "Means we can't do nothing without her round, stupid cow." "Hey!" She tapped his cheek lightly. "Don't talk nasty. Even if it was just you and me, Dan, we still couldn't go to Disney World. So don't you make Katja feel your disappointment, boy. I'm the one who's too short of money." "Why'd you ask me, then?" he demanded with the manipulative shrewdness of the eleven-year-old. "F you knew we couldn't go in the first place, why'd you ask me where I want to go?" "I asked you what you'd fancy doing, Dan. You changed it to where you'd fancy going." She'd caught him out and he knew it, and the miracle of her son was that somehow he'd escaped learning and liking to argue the way so many children his age argued. But still he was just a boy, without a full arsenal of weapons to fight off disappointment. So his face grew cloudy, he crossed his arms, and he settled into the bed for a sulk. She touched his chin to lift his head. He resisted. She sighed and said, "Someday we'll have more than we got right now. But you got to be patient. I love you. So does Katja." She rose from his bed and went to the door. "Up now, Dan. I want to hear you in that bathroom in twenty-two seconds." "I wan' to go t' Disney World," he said stubbornly. "Not half as much as I want to take you there." She gave the door jamb a thoughtful pat and went back to the room she shared with Katja. There, she sat on the edge of the bed and listened to the sounds in the flat: Daniel rising and toddling to the bathroom, Katja making those tiny Dutch pancakes in the kitchen, the sizzle of the batter as she plopped a small portion into the shell-shaped crevasse where the hot butter waited, the snip of cupboard doors opening and closing as she fetched the plates and the sugar, the click of the electric kettle switching off, and then her voice calling out, "Daniel? There are pancakes this morning. Your favourite breakfast I've made." Why? Yasmin wondered. And she wanted to ask but to ask meant to question much more than the simple actions of blending the flour and milk, adding the yeast, and stirring the batter. She brushed her hand along the bed, still unmade, that bore the impressions of their two bodies. The pillows still held the indentations of their heads, and the tangle of blankets and sheets together reflected the manner in which they slept: Katja's arms round her, Katja's warm hands cupping her breasts. She'd pretended sleep when her partner had slid into bed. The room was dark no light from a prison corridor ever cutting again through the black of a nighttime room in which Yasmin Edwards lay so she knew that Katja couldn't tell if her eyes were open or closed. She'd breathed, "Yas?" but Yasmin hadn't answered. And when the covers shifted as she lifted them, as she slipped into the bed like a sailing boat docking so sleek and sure where it always docked, Yasmin made the sleep sounds of a woman only half roused from her dreams by the interruption, and she noted that Katja froze for an instant as if waiting to see how far into consciousness Yasmin would be able to come. That moment of immobility had said something to Yasmin, but its full meaning was not entirely clear. So Yasmin turned to Katja as she drew the covers up to her shoulders. She said, "Hey, baby," in a sleepy murmur and eased her leg over Katja's hip. "Where you been?" "In the morning," Katja whispered. "There's too much to tell." "Too much? Why?" "Sshh, now. Sleep." "Been wanting you here," Yasmin murmured, and she tested Katja in spite of herself, knowing that she was testing her, but not knowing what she'd do with the results. She lifted her mouth for her lover's kiss. She slid her fingers to graze the soft hair of her bush. Katja returned the kiss as always and after a moment gently pushed Yasmin onto her back. She whispered deep in her throat, "Crazy lipstick girl," to which Yasmin replied, "Crazy for you," and heard Katja's breathy laugh. What was to tell from making love in the darkness? What was to tell from mouths and fingers and lingering contact with sweet soft flesh? What could anyone learn from riding the current till it flowed so fast that it no longer made a difference who was guiding the ship to the port just so long as it reached its destination? What the hell was there ever to be gained in the field of knowledge from that? I should've switched on the light, Yasmin thought. I could tell for certain if I'd seen her face. She told herself simultaneously that she had no doubts and that doubts were natural. She told herself that there was in life no single sure thing. But still she felt the hard knot of not knowing tighten inside her like a screw being turned by an unseen hand. Although she wanted to ignore it, she couldn't ignore it any more than she could have ignored a tumour that was threatening her life. But she shook off these thoughts. The day ahead intruded. She rose from the edge of the bed and began to make it, telling herself that if the worst was true, there would be other opportunities to know it. She joined Katja in the kitchen, where the air was sweet with the smell of the little Dutch pancakes that Daniel loved. Katja had made enough for all three of them, and they were mounded like snow-dashed cobblestones in a metal baking dish that stood keeping warm on the hob. She was adding to their breakfast something decidedly English: Several rashers of bacon were sizzling on the grill. "Ah, here you are," Katja said with a smile. "Coffee's ready. Tea for Daniel. And where is our boy? Does he shower? This is new, yes? Is there a girl in his life?" "Don't know," Yasmin said. "If there is, he hasn't said." "That will happen soon, Daniel and girls. Sooner than you think. Children now grow up so very fast. Have you talked to him yet? Life talk. You know." Yasmin poured herself a mug of coffee. "Facts of life?" she asked. "Daniel? You talking 'bout how babies get made?" "It would be useful information if he yet knows nothing of the matter. Or would he have been told already? In the past, I mean." Carefully, Katja didn't say 'when he was in care', and Yasmin knew she would avoid voicing those words and invoking the memories attached to them. Katja's way had always been to move forward, making no reference to the past. "How do you think I abide inside these walls?" she'd once said to Yasmin. "By making plans. I consider the future and not the past." And Yasmin, she'd gone on, would be wise if she followed that example. "Know what you're going to do when you're out of here," she'd insisted. "Know exactly who you will be. Then make it happen. You can do that. But start making that person now, in here, while you have the chance to concentrate on her." And you? Yasmin thought in the kitchen as she watched her lover begin to scoop the pancakes onto their plates. What of you, Katja? What were your plans when you were inside and who was the person you wanted to be? Katja had never said exactly, Yasmin realised now, just, "There will be time when I am free." Time for who? Yasmin wondered. Time for what? She'd never considered before what safety there was in imprisonment. The answers were simple when you were inside, and so were the questions. In freedom, there were too many of both. Katja turned from the cooker, one plate in her hand. "Where is that boy? His pancakes will be like leather if he doesn't hurry." "He wants to go to Disney World for his Christmas hols," Yasmin told her. "Does he?" Katja smiled. "Well, perhaps we can make that happen for him." "How?" "There are ways and there are ways," Katja said. "He is a good boy, our Daniel. He should have what he wants. So should you." Here was the opening, so Yasmin took it at once, saying, "And if I want you? If that's all I want?" Katja laughed, placed Daniel's plate on the table, and came back to Yasmin. "See how easy it is?" she said. "You speak your wish, and it is granted at once." She kissed her and went back to the cooker, calling out, "Daniel! Your pancakes are ready for you now! You must come. Come!" The doorbell buzzed and Yasmin glanced at the small chipped clock that stood on the cooker. Half past seven. Who the hell .. . ? She frowned. Katja said, "This is very early for a neighbour to call," as Yasmin loosed and retied the obi on the scarlet kimono she wore as a dressing gown. "I hope there is no trouble, Yas. Daniel has not played the truant, has he?" "Better not have," Yasmin said. She strode to the door and looked through its spy hole. She drew in a sharp breath when she saw who stood there, waiting patiently for someone to answer, or perhaps not so patiently because he reached out and pushed the bell once again. Katja had come to the kitchen door, pan in one hand and spatula in the other. Yasmin said to her in a terse whisper, "It's that damn bloody copper." "The black man from yesterday? Ah. Well. Let him in, Yas." "I don't want ' He rang the bell again and as he did so, Daniel popped his head out of the bathroom, shouting, "Mum! There's the door! You gonna get it or wha'?" without noticing her standing in front of it like a disobedient child avoiding castigation. When he saw her, he looked from his mother to Katja. Katja said, "Yas. Open the door." And to Daniel, "You've got pancakes waiting. Two dozen I've made you, just as you like them. Mum says you want Christmas at Disney World. Put your clothes on and tell me about it." "We're not going," he said sullenly as the bell rang yet again. "Ah. You know the future that well? Get dressed. We need to talk about this." "Why?" "Because talking makes dreams more real. And when dreams are more real, they have a better chance of coming true. Yasmin, mein Gott, will you answer that door? He's heard us, that man. He plans to stay till you open." Yasmin did so. She jerked on the door so hard it nearly flew from her hand as behind her Daniel ducked into his bedroom and Katja returned to the kitchen. She said without preamble to the black constable, "How'd you get up here, then? I don't recollect buzzing you into the lift." "Lift door was ajar," DC Nkata said. "I helped myself." "Why? What more you want with us, man?" "A few words. "S your .. ." He hesitated and looked beyond her, into the flat where the kitchen light made an oblong of yellow on the carpet squares in the sitting room where no other lights were yet lit. "Katja Wolff here as well?" "Half past seven in the morning, where'd you expect her to be?" Yasmin demanded, but she didn't like the expression on his face as she asked the question, so she hurried on. "We told you everything there is to tell when you 'as here before. Another time through everything in't going to make no difference to what we already said." "This's something new," he told her evenly. "This's something else." "Mum," Dan called out from his bedroom, 'where's m' school jumper? Is it on the telly 'cause I can't find it with the rest His words trailed off as he left his bedroom in search of the piece of clothing. He was wearing his white shirt, his underpants and socks, and his hair still glistened with the water from his shower. "Morning, Daniel," the copper said to him with a nod and a smile. "Getting' ready for school?" "Never you mind what he's getting' ready for," Yasmin snapped before Daniel could answer. And then to her son as she snatched his jumper from one of the hooks next to the door, "Dan, mind you see to that breakfast. Those pancakes're dead trouble to make. See you eat them all." "lo," Daniel said shyly to the cop, and he looked so pleased that Yasmin's insides quaked. "You 'membered my name." "Did," Nkata said agreeably. "Mine's Winston, it is. You like school, Daniel?" "Dan!" Yasmin spoke so sharply that her son jumped. She tossed him his sweater. "You heard me, right? Get dressed and get yourself into that breakfast!" Daniel nodded. But he didn't take his eyes from the cop. Instead he drank him in, with such unabashed interest and eagerness to know and be known that Yasmin wanted to step between them, to shove her son in one direction and the copper in another. Daniel backed into his bedroom, gaze still on Nkata, saying, "You like pancakes? They're little ones. They're special. I 'xpect we got enough to ' "Daniel!" "Right. Sorry, Mum." And he flashed that smile thirty thousand watts, it was and disappeared into his room. Yasmin turned to Nkata. She was suddenly aware of how cold the air was coming in the door, how it swept insidiously round her bare legs and bare feet, how it tickled her knees and caressed her thighs, how it hardened her nipples. The very fact of their hardness was an irritant to her, making her vulnerable to her own body. She shivered in the chill, undecided about slamming the door upon the detective or allowing him in. Katja made the decision for her. She said quietly, "Let him in, Yas," from the kitchen doorway where she stood with the pan of pancakes in her hand. Yasmin stepped back as the constable gave a nod of thanks to Katja. She shoved the door shut and reached for her coat, taking it from its hook and cinching it so tightly round her waist that it might have been a corset and she a Victorian lady with an hour glass figure on her mind. For his part, Nkata unbuttoned his own overcoat and loosened his scarf like a guest come to dinner. "We are having our breakfast," Katja said to him. "And Daniel must not be late for school." "What d'you want, then?" Yasmin demanded of the detective. "Want to see if you'd like to change anything you told me 'bout the other night." He spoke to Katja. "I have no change to make," Katja said. "Tha's something you might want to think over," he told her. Yasmin flared, her anger and fear triumphing over her better judgement. She cried, "This is harassment, this is. This is harassment. This is bloody harassment and you bloody well know it." "Yas," Katja said. She slid the pancake pan onto the hob just inside the kitchen door. She remained where she was, in its frame, and the light from the kitchen behind her cast her face into shadow, which was where she kept it. "Let him have his say." "We heard his say once." "I expect there's more, don't you?" "No." "Yas ' "No! I bloody well don't intend to let some sodding nig-nog with a warrant card ' "Mummy? Daniel had come back into the room, dressed for school now, and on his face such an expression of horror that Yasmin wanted to pull the slur out of the air where it hung among them like a laughing bully, slapping her own face with far more power than it managed to slap the detective's. She said abruptly, "Eat your breakfast," to her son. And to the copper, "Have your say and get out." For an awful moment, Daniel didn't move, as if waiting for direction from the detective, such as the black man's permission to do what his mother had just told him to do. Seeing this, Yasmin wanted to strike someone, but instead she breathed and tried to still her heart's vicious pounding. She said, "Dan," and her son moved to the kitchen, pushing past Katja who told him, "There's juice in the fridge, Daniel," as she stepped to one side. None of them said anything till muted sounds from the kitchen told them Daniel was at least making an attempt to eat his breakfast despite what was going on. All three of them maintained the positions they'd taken when the policeman had first come into the flat, forming a triangle described by the front door, the kitchen, and the television set. Yasmin wanted to leave her spot and join her lover, but just when she made her first move to do so, the detective spoke and his words were what stopped her. "Things don't look nice when a story gets changed too far down the line, Miss Wolff. You sure you were watching telly th' other night? That boy goin' t'say the same if I ask him?" "You leave Daniel alone!" Yasmin cried. "You don't talk to my boy!" "Yas," Katja said, her voice quiet but insistent. "Have your breakfast, all right? It seems the detective wishes to speak to me." I won't leave you talking to this bloke alone. You know what cops do. You know how they are. You can't trust them with anything but ' "The facts," Nkata broke into her words. "And you c'n trust us with the facts just fine. So 'bout the other night .. . ?" "I have nothing to add." "Right. Then what about last night, Miss Wolff?" Yasmin saw Katja's face alter at this question, just round the eyes which narrowed perceptibly. "What about last night?" "You watching telly like before?" "Why d'you want to know?" Yasmin asked. "Katja, you don't tell him anything till he says why he's asking you. He's not going to trick us. He's going to tell us why he's asking what he's asking or he's going to get his big black bum and his cut up mug right out of my flat. That clear to you, mister?" "We got us another hit and run," Nkata said to Katja. "You want to tell me where you were last night?" Bells and alarms went off in Yasmin's head, so she very nearly didn't hear Katja say, "Here." "Round half past eleven?" "Here," she repeated. "Got it," he said and then he added what Yasmin realised he'd been meaning to say from the moment she opened the door to him, "So you didn't spend the whole night with her, then. You just met her, shagged her, and went on your way. That how it happened?" There was a horrible silence, broken by nothing but the voice inside Yasmin's head shouting, "No!" She willed her partner to answer in some way, not to use silence and not to walk off. Katja looked at Yasmin when she said to the copper, "I don't know what you're talking about." "I'm talking 'bout a trip cross South London by bus last evening after work," the detective said. "I'm talking 'bout ending up in Putney at Frere Jacques Bar. "Bout walking down to Wandsworth to Number Fifty-five Galveston Road. I'm talking 'bout what went on inside and who it went on with. This sounding familiar to you? Or were you still watching the telly last night? "Cause if what I saw's any indication, if the telly was on, you two had your eyes glued elsewhere." "You followed me," Katja said carefully. "You and the lady in black. That's right. White lady in black," he added for good measure and he cast a quick look at Yasmin as he said it. "Keep the lights off next time you do something interesting in front of the windows, Miss Wolff." Yasmin felt wild birds fluttering in front of her face. She wanted to wave her arms to frighten them off but her arms wouldn't move. White lady in black was all she heard. Keep the lights off next time. Katja said, "I see. You've done your work well. You followed me high marks for that. Then you followed us together higher marks still. But had you lingered, which you obviously did not, you would have seen us leave within a quarter of an hour. And while this is no doubt the time you yourself would devote to doing something interesting as you call it, Constable Yasmin will confirm that I am a woman who takes rather longer when it comes to giving pleasure." Nkata looked nonplussed, and Yasmin revelled in that look, as much as she revelled in Katja's seizing upon the advantage that she'd just gained by saying, "Had you done your homework more thoroughly, you would have discovered that the woman I met at Frere Jacques was my solicitor, Constable Nkata. She's called Harriet Lewis and if you require her phone number to confirm my story, I shall give it to you." "And Number Fifty-five Galveston Road?" he said. "What about it?" "Who lives there that you and His hesitation and the emphasis he placed on the word told them he'd be checking her story 'your solicitor went calling on last night, Miss Wolff?" "Her partner. And if you ask what I was consulting them about, I shall have to tell you it's a privileged matter, which is what Harriet Lewis will tell you herself when you phone her to confirm my story." Katja strode across the small sitting room to the sofa where her shoulder bag lay against a faded tapestry pillow. She switched on a light and dispelled the morning gloom. She took out a packet of fags and lit one as she rooted in her bag for something else. This turned out to be a business card, which she brought over to Nkata and extended to him. She was the personification of calm, drawing in on the fag and sending a plume of smoke towards the ceiling as she said, "Phone her. And if there is nothing else you wish to learn from us this morning, we have our own breakfast to eat." Nkata took the card and, his eyes on Katja as if they'd pin her to the spot she stood on, he put it in the breast pocket of his coat, saying, "You best hope she matches you A to Z. "Cause if she doesn't ' Yasmin cut in. "That all you want, then? "Cause if it is, time for you to fuck off." Nkata moved his glance to her. "You know where to find me," he said. "Like I'd want to?" Yasmin laughed. She jerked the door open and didn't look at him as he left. She slammed the door behind him as Daniel called out, "Mummy?" from the kitchen. She called back, "Be there in a moment, luv. You keep on with the pancakes." "Don't forget that bacon as well," Katja said. But as they spoke to Daniel, they looked at each other. They looked long and unwavering as each waited for the other to say what needed to be said. "You didn't tell me you'd be meeting Harriet Lewis," Yasmin said. Katja lifted her cigarette to her mouth and took her time about inhaling. She finally said, "There are matters to be dealt with. There are twenty years of matters to be dealt with. This will take time for us to work through." "What d'you mean? What kind of matters? Katja, you in trouble or something?" "There is trouble, yes. But it is not mine. Just something that needs to be resolved." "What? What needs ' "Yas. It is late." Katja rose and ground out her cigarette in an ashtray on the coffee table. "We must work. I cannot explain everything right now. The situation is far too complex." Yasmin wanted to say, "And that's why it took so long to discuss it? Last night, Katja? Because the situation whatever it is is too complex?" but she didn't say it. She placed the question in the mental file that held all the other questions she'd not yet asked. Like the questions about Katja's absences from work, the questions about her absences from home, the questions about where she took the car when she borrowed it and why she needed to borrow it in the first place. If she and Katja were to establish something lasting a connection to each other outside prison walls that was not defined by the need to maintain a bulwark against loneliness, despair, and depression then they were going to have to start dispelling doubt. All her questions grew from doubt, and doubt was the virulent disease that could destroy them. To drive it from her mind, she thought of her first days in Holloway on remand, of the medical unit where she was watched for signs that her despondency would lead to derangement, of the humiliation of the initial strip search "Let's have a look up the grumble and grunt, Missy' and of every strip search that followed it, of stuffing envelopes endlessly mindlessly in what went for rehabilitation in prison, of anger so deep and so profound that she thought it might eat its way into her bones. And she thought of Katja as Katja had been in those first few days and all through her trial, watching her from a distance but never speaking till Yasmin demanded what she wanted one day over tea in the dining room where Katja sat alone as she always sat, a baby killer, the worst sort of monster: one who did not repent. "Don't mess with Geraldine," she had been told. "That kraut bitch's just waiting for a good sorting out." But she'd asked anyway. She'd sat at the German's table, slamming down her tea tray and saying, "What you want with me, bitch? You been watching me like I'm next week's dinner ever since I walked in here, and I'm dead sick of it. You got that straight?" She'd tried to sound tough. She knew without ever having been told that the key to survival behind walls and locked doors was never to show a sign of weakness. "There are ways to cope," Katja had told her in answer. "But you will not manage if you do not submit." "Submit to these fuckers?" Yasmin had shoved her own cup away so hard that tea sloshed out and soaked the paper napkin with milky brown blood. "I don't belong in here. I 'as defending my life." "And that is what you do when you submit. You defend your life. Not the life inside here but the life to come." "What sort if life that's going to be? I get out of here, my baby won't know me. You know how that feels?" And Katja had known, though she never spoke of the child she herself had given up on the day he was born. The miracle of Katja as Yasmin came to know her was that she knew how everything felt: from the loss of freedom to the loss of a child, from being tricked into trusting the wrong people to learning that only the self would stand steadfast. It was on the foundation of Katja's understanding that they'd put the first tentative stones of their association with each other. And during the time they spent together, Katja Wolff who had been in prison ten years when Yasmin encountered her and Yasmin developed a plan for their lives when they were finally released. Revenge hadn't been part of the plan for either of them. Indeed, the word vengeance hadn't crossed their lips. But now Yasmin wondered what Katja had meant all those years ago when she'd said, "I am owed', while imprisoned, without ever giving an explanation of what the debt was or who was to pay it. She couldn't bring herself to ask where her lover had gone last night when she left that house in Galveston Road in the company of her solicitor, Harriet Lewis. The thought of the Katja who had counselled her, who had listened to and loved her throughout her sentence was what kept Yasmin's every doubt in check. But still, she couldn't shake off the memory of that moment when Katja had frozen in the act of getting into bed. She couldn't dismiss what that abrupt stillness in her lover meant. So she said, "I din't know Harriet Lewis had a partner." Katja looked away from her at the window where the curtains were closed upon the growing daylight. She said, "Funny enough, Yas. Neither did I." "Think she'll be able to help you, then? Help with what you're trying to sort out?" "Yes. Yes, I hope she will help me. That would be good, wouldn't it: to put an end to the struggle." And then Katja stood there, waiting for more, waiting to hear the scores of questions that Yasmin Edwards could not bear to ask her. When Yasmin said nothing, Katja finally nodded as if she herself had asked something and received a reply. "Things are being taken care of," she said. "I'll be home straight after work tonight." Chapter Sixteen Barbara Havers got word of Webberly's condition at seven forty-five that morning when the superintendent's secretary phoned her as she was to welling herself dry from her wake-up shower. Upon instruction from DI Lynley who'd been given the rank of acting superintendent, Barbara was told, Dorothea Harriman was ringing every detective under Webberly's command. She had little time to chat, so she was sparing with the details: Webberly was in Charing Cross Hospital, his condition was critical, he was in a coma, he'd been hit by a car late last night while walking his dog. "Bloody hell, Dee," Barbara cried. "Hit by a car? How? Where? Will he .. . ? Is he going to .. . ?" Harriman's voice grew tight, which told Barbara all she needed to know about the effort that Webberly's secretary was making to sound professional in the midst of her own concern for the man she'd worked for for nearly a decade. "That's all I know, Detective Constable. The Hammersmith police are investigating." Barbara said, "Dee, what the hell happened?" "A hit and run." Barbara grew dizzy. At the same time, she felt the hand that held the telephone receiver turn numb, as if it were no longer part of her body. She rang off in a deadened state, and she dressed herself with even less regard than she normally gave to her appearance. Indeed, it wouldn't be until much later in the day that she'd glance in the mirror while making a visit to the ladies' toilet and discover that she'd donned pink socks, green stirrup trousers with sagging knees, and a faded purple T-shirt on which were printed the words "The truth ISN'T out there, it's under here' rendered in ornate Gothic script. She crammed a Pop Tart into the toaster, and while it was heating, she dried her hair and smeared two blobs of fuchsia tinted lipstick on her cheeks to give some colour to her face. Pop Tart in hand, she gathered her belongings, grabbed her car keys, and dashed outside to set off into the morning .. . without coat, scarf, or the least idea of where she was supposed to be going. The cold air brought her abruptly to her senses six steps from her own front door. She said, "Hang on, Barb," and scurried back to her bungalow where she forced herself to sit at the table which she used for dining, ironing, working, and preparing most of what went for her daily dinners. She fired up a fag and told herself that she had to calm down if she was going to be any use to anyone. If Webberly's misfortune and the murder of Eugenie Davies were connected, she wasn't going to be able to assist in the inquiry if she continued to run round like a clockwork mouse. And there was a connection between the two events. She was willing to bet her career on that. She had achieved very little joy from her second trip to the Valley of Kings and the Comfort Inn on the previous evening, learning only that J.W. Pitchley was a regular at both establishments, but so much a regular that neither the waiters at the restaurant nor the night clerk at the hotel had been able to say with certainty that he'd been there on the night Eugenie Davies had been murdered. "Oh my yes, this gentleman has a way with the ladies," the night clerk had commented as he examined Pitchley's photograph over the sound of Major James Bellamy and his wife having a set-to in an ancient episode of Upstairs, Downstairs that was playing nearby on a VCR. The night clerk had paused, had watched the unfolding drama for a moment, had shaken his head and sighed, "It will never last, that marriage," before turning to Barbara, handing back the photograph she'd snagged in West Hamp-stead, and going on. "He brings them here often, these ladies of his. He always pays cash and the lady waits over there, out of sight in the lounge. This is so I will neither see her nor suspect that they intend to use the room for a few hours only, for sexual congress. He has been here many many times, this man." And it was much the same at the Valley of Kings. J.W. Pitchley had eaten his way through the entire menu at the restaurant and the waiters could account for everything he'd ordered in the last five months. But as to his companions .. . ? They were blonde, brunette, red headed, and grey haired. And all of them were English, naturally. What else would one expect of such a decadent culture? Flashing the photo of Eugenie Davies in the company of the photo of J.W. Pitchley had got Barbara exactly nowhere. Ah yes, she was another Englishwoman, wasn't she? both the waiters and the night clerk had asked. Yes, she might have been with him one night. But she might not. It was the gentleman, you see, who interested everyone: How did such an ordinary man have such an extraordinary way with ladies? "Any port in a storm," Barbara had muttered in reply, 'if you know what I mean." They hadn't known and she hadn't explained. She'd just gone home, deciding to bide her time till St. Catherine's opened in the morning. That was what she was supposed to be doing, Barbara realised as she sat at her little dining table, smoked, and hoped that the nicotine would rattle her brain into operation. There was something not right about J.W. Pitchley, and if his address in the possession of the dead woman hadn't told her that much, then the thugs leaping out of his kitchen window and the cheque he'd been writing to one them, surely did. She could do nothing to improve the condition of Superintendent Webberly. But she could pursue her intended course, looking for whatever it was that J.W. Pitchley was trying to hide. What that was might well be what tied him to murder and tied him to the attack on Webberly. And if that was the case, she wanted to be the person who brought the bugger down. She owed that much to the superintendent because she owed Malcolm Webberly more than she could ever repay. With more calm this time, she rustled her donkey jacket from the wardrobe, along with a tartan scarf that she wound round her neck. More appropriately garbed for the November chill, she set out again into the cold, damp morning. She had a wait before St. Catherine's opened, and she used the time to tuck into a hot bacon and mushroom sandwich in the sort of fine, fried-bread-serving old caff that was fast disappearing from the metropolis. After that, she phoned Charing Cross Hospital, where she got word that Webberly's condition remained unchanged. She phoned Inspector Lyn-ley next, getting him on his mobile on his way to the Yard. He'd been at the hospital till six, he told her, at which time it had become clear that hanging round in the intensive care waiting room was only going to rub his nerves raw while doing nothing to improve the superintendent's condition. "Hillier's there," Lynley said abruptly, and those two words served as adequate explanation. AC Hillier wasn't a pleasant man to be around at the best of times. At the worst of times, he'd likely be impossible. "What about the rest of the family?" Barbara asked. "Miranda's come down from Cambridge." "And Frances?" "Laura Hillier's with her. At home." "At home?" Barbara frowned, going on to say, "That's a bit odd, isn't it, sir?" to which Lynley said, "Helen's taken some clothes over to the hospital. Some food as well. Randie came tearing up in such a hurry that she wasn't even wearing shoes, so Helen's taken her a pair of trainers. She'll phone me if there's any sudden change. Helen, that is." "Sir .. ." Barbara wondered at his reticence. There was ground to till here, and she meant to grab the hoe. She was a cop to her core, so her suspicions about J.W. Pitchley aside for a moment she couldn't help wondering whether Frances Webberly's absence from the scene might mean something that went beyond shock. Indeed, she couldn't help wondering if it meant something that indicated Frances's knowledge of her husband's past infidelity. She said, "Sir, as to Frances herself, have you thought ' "What are you on to this morning, Havers?" "Sir .. ." "What did you come up with on Pitchley?" Lynley was making it more than clear that Frances Webberly was a subject he wasn't about to discuss with her, so Barbara filed her irritation if only for the moment and instead recounted what she'd discovered about Pitchley on the previous day: his suspicious behaviour, the presence in his home of two yobbos who'd climbed out of a kitchen window rather than be confronted by her, the cheque he'd been writing, the confirmation of the night clerk and the waiters that Pitchley was indeed an habitue of the Comfort Inn and the Valley of Kings. "So what I reckon is this: If he changed his name once because of a crime, what's to say he didn't change it before because of another?" Lynley said that he thought it unlikely, but he gave Barbara the go-ahead. They would meet later at the Yard. It didn't take too long for Barbara to troll through two decades of legal records in St. Catherine's, since she knew what she was looking for. And what she finally found sent her to New Scotland Yard post haste, where she got on the blower to the station that served Tower Hamlets and spent an hour tracking down and talking to the only detective who'd spent his entire career there. His memory for detail and his possession of enough notes to write his memoirs several times over provided Barbara with the vein of gold she'd been seeking. "Oh, right," he drawled. "That's not a name I'm likely to forget. The whole flaming lot of them've been giving us aggro's long as they've been walking the earth." "But as to the one .. ." Barbara said. "I can spin a tale or two about him." She took notes from the detective's recitation and when she rang off, she went in search of Lynley. She found him in his office, standing near the window, looking grave. He'd apparently been home between his early morning visit to the hospital and coming to the Yard, because he looked as he always looked: perfectly groomed, well-shaven, and suitably dressed. The only sign that things were not normal was in his posture. He'd always stood like a man with a fence pole for a spine, but now he seemed slumped, as if carrying sacks of grain on his shoulders. "The only thing Dee told me was a coma," Barbara said by way of hello. Lynley recounted for her the extent of the superintendent's injuries. He concluded with, "The only blessing is that the car didn't actually run over him. The force he was hit with threw him into a pillar box, which was bad enough. But it could have been worse." "Were there any witnesses?" "Just someone who saw a black vehicle tearing down Stamford Brook Road." "Like the car that hit Eugenie?" "It was large," Lynley said. "According to the witness, it could have been a taxi. He thought it was painted in two tones, black with a grey roof. Hillier claims the grey would be the street lights' reflection on black." "Bugger Hillier for a lark," Barbara scoffed. "Taxis are painted all sorts of ways these days. Two tones, three tones, red and yellow, or covered tyres-to-top with advertisements. I say we should listen to what the witness says. And as we're talking about a black car once again, I expect we've got a connection, don't you?" "With Eugenie Davies?" Lynley didn't wait for a reply. "Yes. I'd say we've got a connection." He gestured with a notebook he'd taken up from his desk and he put on his spectacles as he walked round to sit, nodding for Barbara to do likewise. "But we've still got virtually nothing to go on, Havers. I've been reading through my notes trying to find something, and I'm not getting far. All I can come up with is a conflict among what Richard Davies, his son, and Ian Staines are saying about Eugenie's seeing Gideon. Staines claims she intended to ask Gideon for money to get him out of debt before he loses his house and everything in it, but he also says that she told him after having made the promise to see her son that something had come up and because of it, she wouldn't ask Gideon for the money. In the meantime, Richard Davies claims she hadn't asked to see Gideon at all, but just the opposite. He says he wanted her to try to help Gideon with a problem he's having with stage fright and that's why they were going to meet: at his suggestion. Gideon supports this claim, more or less. He says his mother never asked to see him, at least not that he was told. All he knows is that his father wanted them to meet so she could help him out with his playing." "She played the violin?" Barbara said. "There wasn't one at the cottage in Henley." "Gideon didn't mean that she was going to tutor him. He said there was actually nothing she could do to help him with his problem, other than to "agree" with his father." "What's that supposed to mean when it's dancing the polka?" "I don't know. But I'll tell you this: He doesn't have stage fright. There's something seriously wrong with the man." "Like a guilty conscience? Where was he three nights ago?" "Home. Alone. So he says." Lynley tossed his notebook on his desk and removed his glasses. "And that doesn't even begin to address Eugenie Davies' e-mail, Barbara." He brought her into the picture on that front, saying in conclusion, "Jete was the name tagged onto the message. Does that mean anything to you?" "An acronym?" She considered the possible words that the four letters could begin, with just and eat coming to mind at once. She followed that thought along the family tree to its cousin, saying, "Could be Pitchley branching out from his Tongue Man handle?" "What did you get from St. Catherine's on him?" Lynley asked her. "Gold," she replied. "St. Catherine's confirms Pitchley's claim that he was James Pitchford twenty years ago." "How is that gold?" "Because of what follows," Barbara replied. "Before he was Pitchford, he was someone else: He was Jimmy Pytches, sir, little Jimmy Pytches from Tower Hamlets. He changed his name to Pitchford six years before the murder in Kensington Square." "Unusual," Lynley agreed, 'but hardly damning." "By itself, right. But when you put two name changes in one lifetime into the same basket as having two blokes jumping out of his kitchen window when the rozzers come to call, you've got something that smells like cod in the sun. So I rang the station over there and asked if anyone remembered a Jimmy Pytches." "And?" Lynley asked. "And listen to this. The whole family're in and out of trouble all the time. Were back then. Still are now. And when Pitchley was Jimmy Pytches all those years ago, a baby died while he was looking after her. He was a teenager at the time, and the investigation couldn't pin anything on him. The inquest finally called it cot death, but not before our Jimmy spent forty-eight hours being held and questioned as suspect number one. Here. Check my notes if you want to." Lynley did so, putting his reading glasses back on. Barbara said, "A second kid dying while he was in the same house," as Lynley looked over the information. "Not quite kosher, is it, sir?" "If he did indeed murder Sonia Davies and if Katja Wolff carried the can for him," Lynley began and Barbara interrupted with, "Perhaps this is why she never said a word once she was arrested, sir. Say she and Pitchford had a thing she was pregnant, right? and when Sonia was drowned, they both knew that the cops would look hard at Pitchford because of the other death, once they found out who he really was. If they could play it out as an accident, as negligence ' "Why would he have drowned the Davies girl?" "Jealousy over what the family had and he hadn't got. Anger over how they were treating his beloved. He wants to rescue her from her situation, or he wants to get back at people he sees as having what he'll never put his mitts on, so he goes after the kid. Katja takes the fall for him, knowing about his past and thinking she'll get a year or two for negligence while he'd probably get life for premeditated murder. And she never once considers how a jury's going to react to her keeping silent about the death of a disabled toddler. And just think of what was probably going through their heads: shades of Mengele and all that, Inspector, and she won't even say what happened. So the judge throws the book at her, she gets twenty years, and Pitchford disappears from her life, leaving her to rot in prison while he becomes Pitchley and makes a killing in the City." "And then what?" Lynley said. "She gets out of prison and then what, Havers?" "She tells Eugenie what really happened, who really did it. Eugenie tracks down Pitchley the way I tracked down Pytches. She goes to confront him, but she never makes it." "Because?" "Because she gets it in the street." "I realise that. But from whom, Barbara?" "I think Leach might be onto it, sir." "Pitchley? Why?" "Katja Wolff wants justice. So does Eugenie. The only way to get it is to put Pitchley away, which I doubt he'd go for." Lynley shook his head. "How do you explain Webberly, then?" "I think you already know the answer to that." "Those letters?" "It's time to hand them over. You've got to see they're important, Inspector." "Havers, they're more than ten years old. They're not an issue." "Wrong, wrong, wrong." Barbara pulled on her sandy fringe in sheer frustration. "Look. Say Pitchley and Eugenie had something going. Say that's the reason she was in his street the other night. Say he's been to Henley to see her on the sly and during a tryst he's come across those letters. He's gone round the bend with jealousy, so he gives her the chop and then takes down the superintendent." Lynley shook his head. "Barbara, you can't have it all ways. You're twisting the facts to fit a conclusion. But they don't fit it, and it doesn't fit the case." "Why not?" "Because it leaves too much unaccounted for." Lynley ticked off the items. "How could Pitchley have maintained an affair with Eugenie Davies without Ted Wiley's knowledge since Wiley appears to have kept close tabs on the comings and goings at Doll Cottage? What did Eugenie have to confess to Wiley, and why did she die the night before the scheduled confession? Who is Jetet Who was she meeting at those pubs and hotels? And what do we do about the coincidence of Katja Wolff s release from prison and two hit and runs in which the victims are significant people in the case that put her away?" Barbara sighed, her shoulders slumping. She said, "Okay. Where's Winston? What's he got to say about Katja Wolff?" Lynley told her about Nkata's report on the German woman's movements from Kennington to Wandsworth on the previous night. He ended with, "He was confident that both Yasmin Edwards and Katja Wolff are hiding something. When he got the word about Webberly, he passed the message back that he wanted to have another chat with them." "So he thinks there's a connection between the hit and runs as well." "Right. And I agree. There is a connection, Havers. We just haven't seen it clearly." Lynley stood, handed Barbara her notes, and began gathering up material from his desk. He said, "Let's get on to Hampstead. Leach's team must have something we can work with by now." Winston Nkata sat in front of the Hampstead police station for a good five minutes before he clambered out of his car. Because of a four car pile-up on the huge roundabout just before the crossing to Vauxhall Bridge, it had taken him more than ninety minutes to get from South London. He was glad of that. Sitting in the car while firemen, paramedics, and traffic police sorted out the tangle of metal and injured bodies had given him the time he needed to come to terms with the balls-up he'd made of his interview with Katja Wolff and Yasmin Edwards. He'd cocked it up brilliantly. He'd shown his hand. He'd charged like a bull from the pen exactly sixty-seven minutes after opening his eyes that morning, galloping from his parents' flat to Kennington at the earliest hour he'd deemed reasonable. Snorting and pawing the ground, eager to lower his horns and attack, he'd ridden up in that creaking lift with a soaring sense of being about to break the case. And he'd gone to great lengths to assure himself that his mission to Kennington was indeed all about the case. Because if he could reveal Katja Wolff s little something on the side in such a way as to create a fissure in her and Yasmin's relationship, then what was to prevent Yasmin Edwards from admitting what he already knew in his bones to be true: that Katja Wolff had not been home on the night of the murder of Eugenie Davies? He intended nothing more than that, he'd told himself. He was just a cop carrying out his duties. Her flesh meant nothing: smooth and taut, the colour of newly minted pennies. Her body was of no account either: lithe and firm, with a waist dipping in over welcoming hips. Her eyes were only windows: dark like the shadows and trying to hide what they couldn't hide, which was anger and fear. And that anger and fear were meant to be used, to be used by him to whom she was nothing, just a dyke who'd chopped her husband one night and had taken up with a baby killer. It wasn't his responsibility to sort out why Yasmin Edwards would bring that baby killer into her home where her own child lived, and Nkata knew it. But he did tell himself that, aside from providing them the break they needed in the investigation, it would also be for the best if the crack he was able to produce in the women's relationship led to a breakup that would take Daniel Edwards out of the reach of a convicted killer. He shut his ears to the thought that the boy's own mother also was a convicted killer. After all, she'd struck out against an adult. There was nothing in her background to indicate she had it in for children. So he was filled with the righteousness of his cause when he rang the buzzer at Yasmin Edwards' door. And when there was no answer at first, he merely used the lack of response as a spur. It dug into the sides of his reason for being there, and he rang again till he forced a reply. Nkata was a man who'd encountered prejudice and hatred for most of his life. One couldn't be a member of a minority race in England and not be the recipient of hostility in a hundred subtle forms every day. Even at the Met, where he'd assumed performance counted for more than epidermal hue, he'd learned to watch himself, never allowing others in too close, never completely letting down his guard lest he pay the price of presuming that a familiarity of discourse meant an equality of mind. That was not the case, no matter how things looked to the uninitiated observer. And wise was the black man who remembered that. Because of all this, Nkata had long thought himself incapable of the sort of judgement that he'd learned to experience at the hands of others. But after his morning interview in the Doddington Grove Estate, he'd learned that his vision was just as narrow and just as fully capable of leading him to ill-founded conclusions as was the vision of the most illiterate, badly dressed, and ill-spoken member of the National Front. He'd seen them together. He'd seen the way they greeted each other, the way they talked together, the way they walked like a couple to Galveston Road. He'd known Wolff was a woman whose life partner was another woman. So when they'd gone into that house and shut the door, he'd allowed an embrace silhouetted against the window to provoke his imagination into running from its pen like an untamed pony. A lesbian meeting another woman and trotting off with her for seclusion together meant only one thing. So he had believed. So he had let his belief colour his second interview in Yasmin Edwards' flat. Had he not known how thoroughly he'd cocked things up right then, he would have been informed soon enough when he phoned the number on the business card that Katja had handed him. Harriet Lewis herself confirmed the story: Yes, she was Katja Wolff s solicitor. Yes, she had been with her on the previous evening. Yes, they had gone to Galveston Road together. "You leave after quarter of an hour?" Nkata asked her. She said, "What's this about, Constable?" "What sort of business 'd you engage in in Galveston Road?" he asked her. "None that's any business of yours," the solicitor had said, just as Katja Wolff promised she would. "How long's she been a client of yours?" he tried next. "Our conversation is over," she'd said. "I work for Miss Wolff, not for you." So he was left with nothing except the knowledge that he'd done everything wrong and that he'd have to explain himself to the one person he sought to emulate: DI Lynley. And when the traffic snarled up near Vauxhall Bridge, then stopped altogether as sirens blared and lights flashed up ahead, he was grateful not only for the diversion a smash-up provided but also for the time he would be handed to decide how to tell the tale of the last twelve hours. Now, he looked at the front of the Hampstead police station and forced himself out of his car. He walked inside, showed his ID, and trudged to do the penance his actions called for. He found everyone in the incident room, where the morning meeting was just breaking up. The china board was filled with the day's list of actions and the men and women assigned to them, but the hush among the constables leaving told Nkata that they'd been informed about what had happened to Webberly. DI Lynley and Barbara Havers remained behind, comparing two computer sheets. Nkata joined them, saying, "Sorry. Pile-up at Vauxhall Bridge," to which Lynley replied, looking up over his spectacles, "Ah. Winstofi. How did it go?" "Couldn't shake either one of them from what they'd already said." "Damn," Barb muttered. "Did you speak to Edwards alone?" Lynley asked. "Didn't need to. Wolff was meeting with her solicitor, "Spector. That's who the bird was. Solicitor confirmed when I rang her." He didn't add more, but his face must have shown something of his chagrin because Lynley examined him a long moment during which Nkata felt all the misery of a child who's displeased his parent. "You sounded quite sure when we spoke," Lynley remarked, 'and when you're feeling sure, you're usually right. Are you certain you spoke to the solicitor, Winnie? Wolff could have given you the number of a friend to play the role of solicitor when you rang her." "She gave me her business card," Nkata said. "And what solicitor of your acquaintance's going to lie for a client when the answer the cops want is either yes or no? But I still think the women are hiding something. I just went at it wrong to suss out what it is." And then because his admiration for Lynley would always override his need to look good in the inspector's eyes, he added, "But I cocked it up with my whole approach. Whoever talks to them next, better not be me." Barbara Havers said supportively, "Well, God knows I've done that more than once, Winnie," and Nkata shot her a grateful look. She had cocked up and it had cost her a suspension from duty, her previous rank, and probably the chance to rise in the Met. But she'd at least brought down a killer by the end of that case, while he'd done nothing more than complicate matters. Lynley said, "Yes. Well. Haven't we all. No matter, Winston. We'll sort things out," although he did sound disappointed to Nkata's ears, which wasn't half of what his own mum was going to sound when he told her what had happened. "Jewel," she'd say, 'what were you thinking, son?" And that was a question he preferred not to answer. He brought himself round to listening to the update he'd missed from the morning's briefing. The BT records from Eugenie Davies' phone had been matched up with names and addresses. And the callers on her answer machine had likewise been identified. The woman who named herself Lynn had emerged as one Lynn Davies "A relation?" Nkata asked. "Still to be discovered." -with an address that put her close to East Dulwich. "Havers will handle that interview," Lynley said. He went on to report that the unidentified male caller on the answer machine who'd angrily demanded that Mrs. Davies pick up the phone and talk to him was one Raphael Robson, whose address in Gospel Oak put him closer to the scene of the murder than anyone else, other than J.W. Pitchley, of course. "I'll take on Robson next," Lynley went on, and he added to Nkata, "I'd like you there as well," as if already knowing that he would need to bolster Nkata's faltering sense of competence. Nkata said, "Right," as Lynley went on to explain that the BT records had also confirmed Richard Davies' story of phone calls taken from and made to his former wife. They'd begun in early August, round the time that their son had had his problem at Wigmore Hall and they'd continued up to the morning before Eugenie Davies' death when Davies had made a brief call to her. There were plenty of calls from Staines as well, Lynley told him. So both men's stories were being corroborated by the evidence they had at hand. "A word, you three?" came from the doorway upon the conclusion of Lynley's remarks. They swung round to see that DCI Leach had returned to the incident room, and he had a scrap of paper in his hand that he gestured with as he said, "In my office, if you will," after which he vanished, expecting them to follow. "Where've you got to tracing the kid Wolff had while she was in prison?" Leach asked Barbara Havers when they joined him. Barbara said, "I got side-tracked onto Pitchley once I stopped in for his photo yesterday. I'm onto that today. But nothing's telling us that Katja Wolff even wants to know where the kid ended up, sir. If she wanted to find him, the first person she would've talked to is the nun. Which she hasn't done." Leach made a dismissive noise in his throat. "Check it out, all the same." "Right," Barbara said. "D'you want it before or after I track down Lynn Davies?" "Before. After. Just do it, Constable," Leach said irritably. "We've had a report from across the river. Forensic have analysed the paint chips they found on the body." "And?" Lynley asked. "We're going to have to adjust our thinking. SO7 says the paint shows cellulose mixed with thinners to water it down. That doesn't match up with anything that's been used on cars for at least forty years. They're telling us the chips came from something old. Think nineteen-fifties at the latest, they're saying." "Nineteen-fiftes?" Barbara asked incredulously. "That explains why last night's witness thought of a limousine," Lynley said. "Cars were big in the fifties. Jaguars. Rolls Royces. Bentleys were enormous." "So someone ran her down in his classic auto?" Barbara Havers asked. "Now that's desperation." "Could be a taxi," Nkata pointed out. "Taxi out of use, got sold to someone who fixed it up and uses it now for his regular motor." "Taxi, classic car, or golden chariot," Barbara said, 'everyone we've got under the microscope's out of the running." "Unless one of them borrowed a car," Lynley noted. "We can't discount that possibility," Leach concurred. "Are we back to square one, then?" Barbara asked. "I'll get someone to start checking it out. That and repair shops catering for old cars. Although we can't expect much body damage on something manufactured in the fifties. Cars were like tanks then." "But they had chrome bumpers," Nkata said, 'massive chrome bumpers that could've got mashed." "So we'll need to check out old parts shops as well." Leach made a note. "It's easier to replace than to repair, especially if you know the cops are looking." He phoned into the incident room and allocated that assignment, after which he rang off and said to Lynley, "It still could be a blind coincidence." Lynley said, "Do you think that, sir?" in a measured tone that told Nkata the DI was looking for something beneath whatever reply the DCI might give. "I'd like to. But I do see how it puts one in blinkers: thinking what we want to think in this situation." He gazed at his telephone as if willing it to ring. The others said nothing. Finally, he murmured, "He's a good man. He may have stepped wrong now and then, but which of us hasn't? Stepping wrong doesn't make him less of what he is." He looked at Lynley and they seemed to communicate something that Nkata couldn't understand. Then he said, "Get on with it, you lot," and they left him. Outside, Barbara Havers spoke to Lynley. "He knows, Inspector." Nkata said, "Knows what? Who?" Barbara said, "Leach. He knows Webberly's got a connection with the Davies woman." "Course he knows it. They worked on that old case together. Nothing new there. And we already knew it as well." "Right. But what we didn't know ' "That'll do, Havers," Lynley said. The two of them exchanged a long look before Barbara said airily, "Oh. Right. Well, I'm off, then," and with a friendly nod at Nkata, she walked towards her car. In the immediate aftermath of this brief exchange, Nkata felt the unspoken reprimand in Lynley's decision to keep from him what was obviously a new piece of information which he and Barbara had uncovered. Nkata realised he deserved to be left in the dark in this way God knew he'd certainly not shown he possessed the requisite level of skill to do the right thing with a valuable new fact but at the same time he thought he'd been circumspect enough with his recitation of his morning's cock-up so as not to be thought of as a complete incompetent. That obviously hadn't been the case. Nkata felt all the misery of his position. He said, "Spector, you want me off this now?" "Off what, Winston?" "The case. You know, if I can't talk to two birds without making a mess of things .. ." He shrugged. In reply Lynley looked completely confused, and Nkata knew he'd have to go further, admitting what he preferred to keep buried. He directed his gaze to Barbara, who'd climbed into her soup tin car and was in the process of revving the Mini's sorely tried engine. He said, "I mean, if I don't know what to do with a fact when I got a fact, I guess I c'n see how you might not want me to have a fact in the first place. But that doesn't give me a full hand, which c'n make me less effective, right? Not that I showed how 'ffective I was this morning, of course. So what I'm saying's ... if you want me off the case ' "Winston," Lynley cut in firmly. "A hair shirt might be appropriate, given the circumstance whatever it is but I assure you, the cat o' nine tails can be dispensed with." "What?" Lynley smiled. "You've a brilliant career ahead of you, Winnie. No blots on your copy book, unlike the rest of us. I'd like to see you keep it that way. Do you understand?" "That I cocked things up? That another cock-up'd mean a formal ' "No. That I'd like to keep you in the clear should .. ." Uncharacteristically, Lynley paused in what seemed like the search for a phrase that would explain something without revealing what he was explaining. He settled on, "Should our procedures come under scrutiny later on, I'd prefer them to be mine and not yours," and he made the statement with such delicacy that Nkata followed it with aleap to comprehension once he put Lynley's words together with what Barbara Havers had inadvertently revealed just before leaving them. He said in disbelief, "Holy God. You onto something you're keeping quiet about?" Lynley said wryly, "Job well done. You didn't hear that from me." "Barb knows 'bout it?" "Only because she was there. I'm responsible, Winston. I'd like to keep it that way." "Could it take us to the killer, what you're on to?" "I don't think so. But yes, it may do." "Is it evidence?" "Let's not discuss that." Nkata couldn't believe what he was hearing. "Then you got to turn it in! You got to 'stablish the chain. You can't not hand it over 'cause you think .. . What do you think?" "That the hit and runs are probably connected but that I need to see exactly how they're connected before I make a move that could destroy someone's life. What's left of it. It's my decision, Winnie. And to protect yourself, I suggest you don't ask any more questions." Nkata studied the DI, not believing that Lynley, of all people, should be operating in a grey area. He knew that he could insist and end up in there with him with Barbara as well but he was ambitious enough to heed the wisdom in the inspector's words. Still, he said, "Wish you wouldn't go at it like this, man." "Objection noted," Lynley said. Chapter Seventeen Libby Neale decided to call in sick with the flu. She knew Rock Peters would have a conniption and threaten to withhold her week's pay not that that actually meant anything since he was currently three weeks behind paying her anyway- but she didn't care. When she'd parted from Gideon the previous night, she'd hoped he'd come down to her flat after the cop left him and when he didn't, she slept so badly that she was as good as sick anyway. So calling it the flu wasn't that much of a lie. She wandered around her flat in sweats for the first three hours after she got up, mostly pounding the heels of her palms together and straining her ears to hear any sound from above to indicate that Gideon was stirring. She didn't get very far. Finally, she gave up the attempt at eavesdropping on him not that it was really eavesdropping when all you were listening for was the sound of movement to indicate that someone was basically all right and she decided to make sure in person that he was doing okay. He'd been a wreck yesterday before the cop got there. Who the hell knew what condition he'd been in once the cop left? Should've gone to him then, she told herself. And while she made an earnest attempt not to ponder the reason that she hadn't gone to him once the cop departed, the thought of what she should have done in the first place led inexorably to the why of why she hadn't. He'd spooked her. He'd been so not there. She'd talked to him in the kite she'd and after that in the kitchen and he'd answered her sort of -but still he'd been so somewhere else in his head that she'd wondered if he maybe needed to be committed or something. Just for a while. And then wondering that had made her feel so disloyal that she couldn't really face him, or at least that was what she told herself when she spent the evening watching old movies on Sky TV and eating two very large bags of cheddar cheese popcorn which she could have done without thank you very much and finally going to bed alone where she fought with the sheets and blankets all night when she wasn't having a soon-to-be-major-motion-picture nightmare. So after spinning her wheels pacing the floor, browsing in the refrigerator for the bag of celery that was supposed to make her feel less guilty about the cheddar cheese popcorn, and watching Kilroy yacking with women who'd married men young enough to be their sons and in two cases their frigging grandsons, she went upstairs to search out Gideon. She found him on the floor in the music room, sitting beneath the window seat with his back against the wall. He had his legs drawn up to his chest, with his chin resting upon his knees like some kid who's been disciplined by a ticked-off parent. All around him were scattered papers, which turned out to be Xerox copies of newspaper articles, all of them covering the same subject. He'd been back to the Press Association's news library. He didn't look at her when she came into the room. He was focused on the stories surrounding him, and she wondered if he even heard her. She said his name, but he didn't stir, other than to begin a gentle rocking. Breakdown, she thought with alarm. Complete crack up. He looked like someone who'd lost it. He was wearing exactly what he'd had on yesterday, so she figured he hadn't slept all night either. "Hey," she said quietly, 'what's up, Gideon? You been back down to Victoria? Why'n't you tell me? I'd've gone with you." She scanned the papers that fanned around him, overlarge sheets on which newspaper clippings had been photocopied every which way. She saw that the British papers in keeping with the country's general bent towards xenophobia had gone after the nanny with a rusty hatchet. If she wasn't 'the German' in every article, she was 'the former Communist whose family lived particularly well' not to mention suspiciously well, Libby thought sardonically 'under Russian domination'. One paper had unearthed the news that her grandfather had been a member of the Nazi party while another had found a picture of her father, who'd evidently been a card holding jackbooted, Sieg heil! shouting member of the Hitler Youth, if that's what it was called. The tireless ability of the press to milk a story for its every frigging ounce of liquid was totally amazing. It looked to Libby like the life of everyone even moderately involved with the death of Sonia Davies and the trial and conviction of her killer had been dissected by the tabloids at one time or another. So Gideon's home teacher had come under the microscope, as had the lodger, as well as Rafe Robson, both of Gideon's parents, and his grandparents, too. And long after the verdict it seemed that anyone who'd wanted to make a buck had sold his version of the story to the papers. Thus, people had crawled out from under rocks to comment on life as a nanny- NEWS READER I WAS A NANNY AND IT WAS HELL blared one headline and those who had no experience as nannies had experience with Germans they wanted to reveal A RACE APART, FORMER BERLIN GI SAYS announced another. But what Libby noticed most of all was the number of stories that dealt with Gideon's family having had a nanny for his sister in the first place. They went at the topic from several angles: There was the group who chose to dwell on what the German nanny was paid (a pittance, so no wonder she finally offed the poor kid, like in a rage or something) compared to what something called 'a well-trained Norland Nanny' was paid (a fortune that prompted Libby to seriously consider a change in career, pronto), Grafting their nasty little articles in such a way as to suggest that the Davies family had gotten to the max what they'd paid for with their skinflint pennies. Then there was the group who chose to dwell on speculating what purposes were being served when a mother made the decision to 'work outside the home." And then there was the group who chose to dwell on what it did to parental expectation, responsibility, and devotion when a family was burdened with a disabled child. Battle lines were drawn all over the place on the topic of how to deal with the birth of a Down's Syndrome baby, and all the options taken by parents of such children were given a good airing: give them up for adoption, put them away at the Government's expense, devote your life to them, learn to cope by asking the aid of outside agencies, join a support group, soldier on with upper lips stiff, treat the child like any other, and on and on. Libby found that she couldn't begin to imagine what it had been like for all of them when little Sonia Davies had died. Her birth would have been tough to deal with, but to love her because they must have loved her, right? and then to lose her and then to have every detail of what went into her existence and the existence of her family displayed for public entertainment and consumption .. . Whew, Libby thought. How did anyone deal with that? Not well, if Gideon was anything to go by. He'd changed his position so his forehead was balanced on his knees. He continued to rock. "Gideon," she asked him, 'you all right?" "I don't want to remember now that I remember," he replied numbly. "I don't want to think. And I can't stop either. Remembering. Thinking. I want to rip my brain from my head." "I can buy that," Libby assured him. "So why don't we dump all this stuff in the trash? You been reading it all night?" She bent to the papers and began to gather them. "No wonder you can't get your mind off it, Gid." He grabbed her wrist, crying out, "Don't!" "But if you don't want to think ' "No! I've been reading and reading and I want to know how anyone could continue to exist, could even want to exist.. . Look at it all, Libby. Look. Just look. I'm understanding it all now, you see? And I just can't cope with the understanding." Libby looked again at the papers and saw them the way that Gideon must have seen them, coming upon them twenty years after the fact of being protected from the knowledge of what that time had been like for his family. Particularly she saw the thinly veiled attacks on his parents in the light he would be seeing them. And she made the leap that he no doubt had already made from what the papers had printed: His mother had left them because of this; she had disappeared for nearly twenty years because she had no doubt begun to believe herself as ill-suited for parenthood as the newspapers had made her out to be. It seemed that Gideon was finally understanding his past. Little wonder that he was inches away from flipping out. She was about to say all of this when he got to his feet. He took two steps, then swayed. She leapt up and grabbed him by the arm. He said, "I've got to see Cresswell-White." "Who? That attorney?" He headed out of the room, fumbling in his pocket and bringing out his keys. The thought of him driving alone across London spurred Libby to follow. At the front door, she snatched his leather jacket from the coat rack, and she trailed him along the sidewalk to his GPS. As he attempted to insert the key in the lock with a hand that trembled like an octogenarian's, she threw the jacket over his shoulders and said, "You're not driving. You'd get in a wreck before you got to Regent's Park." "I've got to get to the Temple." "Fine. Cool. Whatever. I'll drive." During the drive, Gideon said not a word. He merely stared straight ahead, his knees knocking together spasmodically. He got out the moment she turned off the ignition in the area of the Temple. He set off down the street. Libby locked the car and trotted to catch up, reaching him as he crossed over at the end and entered that holy of legal holies. Gideon led her to the place she'd accompanied him previously: to a building that was part brick and part stone, sitting on the edge of a little park. He went in through the same narrow doorway, where black wooden slats on the wall were painted in white with the names of the lawyers who had offices inside. They had to cool their heels in reception before Cresswell-White had a break in his schedule. They sat in silence on the black leather sofas, both of them staring alternately at the Persian carpet and the brass chandelier. Around them, telephones rang constantly and quietly as a group working in an office directly opposite the sofas fielded calls. After forty minutes of pondering the crucial issue of whether the oak chest in reception had been built to store chamber pots, Libby heard someone say, "Gideon," and roused herself to see that Bertram Cresswell-White had himself come out to take them back to his corner office. Unlike their previous visit which had been scheduled in advance no coffee was on offer this time, although a fire was lit and it was doing at least something to cut the chill that pervaded the room. The lawyer had been working hard at some task or another, for a computer's monitor was still glowing with a page of typescript and half a dozen books were open on his desk along with what looked like pretty ancient files. Among these, a black and white photograph of a woman lay. She was blonde with close-cropped hair, a bad complexion, and an expression saying "Don't mess with me'. Gideon saw the picture and said, "Are you trying to get her out?" Cresswell-White closed the file, gestured them to the leather chairs near the fireplace and said, "She would have been hanged if I'd had my way and the law were different. She's a monster. And I've made the study of monsters my avocation." "What'd she do?" Libby asked. "Killed children and buried their bodies on the moors. She liked to make audiotapes as she tortured them, she and her boyfriend." Libby swallowed. Cresswell-White glanced at his watch with some meaning but tempered this action with, "I heard about your mother, Gideon. On Radio Four News. I'm terribly sorry. I expect that's something to do with why you've come. How can I help you?" "With her address." Gideon spoke as if he'd thought of nothing else since first getting into his car in Chalcot Square. "Whose?" "You have to know where she is. You were the one who put her away so you would've been told when they let her out, and I know she's out. That's why I've come. I need her address." Libby thought, Hold on here, Gid. Cresswell-White gave his version of that same reaction. He knotted his eyebrows, saying, "Are you asking me for Katja Wolff s address?" "You have it, don't you? You have to have it. I don't expect they'd let her out without telling you where she went." "Why do you want it? I'm not saying I do have it, by the way." "She's owed." Libby thought, This is really the limit. She said quietly but with what she hoped was gentle urgency, "Gideon. Gosh. The police're handling this, aren't they?" "She's out now," Gideon said to Cresswell-White as if Libby hadn't spoken. "She's out and she's owed. Where is she?" "I can't tell you that." Cresswell-White leaned forward, his body if not his hands reaching for Gideon. "I know you've had a very bad shock. Your life has probably been one long effort to recover from what she put you through. God knows the time that she spent in prison doesn't mitigate your suffering one iota." "I've got to find her," Gideon said. "It's the only way." "No. Listen to me. It's the wrong way. Oh, it feels right and I know that feeling: You'd climb back into the past if you could and you'd tear her limb from limb before the fact, just to prevent her from doing the harm she eventually did your family. But you'd gain as little as I gain, Gideon, when I hear the jury's verdict and I know that I've won but all the time I've lost because nothing can bring a dead child back to life. A woman who takes the life of a child is the worst kind of demon because she can give life if she chooses. And to take a life when you can give life is a crime that's compounded and one for which no sentence will ever be long enough and no punishment even death ever good enough." "There's got to be reparation," Gideon said. He didn't sound so much stubborn as desperate. "My mother's dead, don't you see? There's got to be reparation and this is the only way. I don't have a choice." "You do," Cresswell-White said. "You can choose not to meet her at the level she operates on. You can choose to believe what I'm telling you because what I'm telling you comes from decades of experience. There is no vengeance for this sort of thing. Even death was no vengeance when death was both legal and possible, Gideon." "You don't understand." Gideon closed his eyes and for a moment, Libby thought he'd start crying. She wanted to do something to prevent him breaking down and humiliating himself further in the eyes of this man who did not really know him and could not therefore know what he'd been going through for two long months. But she also wanted to do something to smooth things over, on the off chance that something bad might accidentally happen to the German chick in the next few days, in which case Gideon would be the first person they'd be talking to after this little conversation in the Temple. Not that she really thought Gideon'd do anything to anyone. He was just talking; he was just looking for something to make him feel like his world wasn't falling apart. Libby said to the lawyer in a low voice, "He's been up all night. And he's been having nightmares on the nights he can sleep. He saw her, see, and ' Cresswell-White sat up and took notice of this, saying, "Katja Wolff? Has she contacted you, Gideon? The terms of her parole prevent her from contacting any member of the family, and if she violates those terms, we can see to it ' "No, no. His mom," Libby interrupted. "He saw his mom. But he didn't know who she was because he hadn't seen her since he was a little kid. And that's been eating at him since he heard she was .. . you know, killed." She glanced cautiously at Gideon. His eyes were still closed, and his head was shaking as if he wanted to negate everything that had happened to bring him to this position of begging a lawyer he didn't even know to violate whatever it was he would have to violate in order to give out the information that Gideon wanted. That wasn't going to happen, and Libby knew it. Cresswell-White sure as hell wasn't going to hand the German nanny over to Gideon on a platter and risk his own reputation and career for having done so. Which was just as well and damn lucky to boot. All Gideon needed to really mess up his life at this point was access to the woman who'd killed his sister and maybe killed his mom as well. But Libby knew how he felt, or at least she thought she knew. He felt like he'd blown his chance for some kind of redemption for some kind of sin the punishment for which was not being able to play his violin. And that's what it all boiled down to after all: that violin. Cresswell-White said, "Gideon, Katja Wolff s not worth the time it would take to locate her. This is a woman who showed no remorse, who was so certain of her exoneration that she offered no defence of her actions. Her silence said, "Let them prove they have a case," and only when the facts piled up those bruises, those fractures left to heal untreated on your sister's body and she heard the verdict and the sentence did she decide a defence might be in order. Imagine that. Imagine what kind of person lies behind that simple refusal to cooperate to answer the most basic of questions when a child in her care has died. She didn't even weep once she made her initial statement. And she won't weep now. You can't expect that from her. She is not like us. Abusers of children are never like us." Libby watched anxiously as Cresswell-White spoke, looking for a sign that what the lawyer was saying was somehow making an impression on Gideon. But she was left with a growing sense of despair when Gideon opened his eyes, got to his feet, and spoke. He said, as if Cresswell-White's words meant nothing to him. "This is what it is: I didn't understand, but now I do. And I've got to find her." He walked towards the door of the office, raising his hands to his forehead as if he wanted to do what he'd said earlier: rip the brain from his head. Cresswell-White said to Libby, "He's not well." To which she responded, "Well, duh," as she went after Gideon. Raphael Robson's home in Gospel Oak was set off one of the busier roads in the district. It turned out to be an enormous, ramshackle Edwardian building in need of renovation, the front garden of which was hidden behind a yew hedge and gravel led over to make it into a parking space. When Lynley and Nkata arrived, three vehicles were standing in front of house: a dirty white van, a black Vauxhall, and a silver Renault. Lynley took quick note of the fact that the Vauxhall wasn't old enough to qualify as their hit-and-run vehicle. A man came round the side of the house as they approached the front steps. He headed towards the Renault without noticing them. When Lynley called out, he stopped in his tracks, car keys extended to unlock his vehicle. Was he Raphael Robson? Lynley asked him and produced his identification. The man was an unappealing sort with a serious comb-over of dun-coloured hair that began just above his left ear and made his skull look as if someone were water-colouring a lattice across it. He was patchy skinned from far too many holidays in the Mediterranean in August, and his shoulders bore a liberal sprinkling of dandruff. He gave a glance to Lynley's warrant card and said yes, he was Raphael Robson. Lynley introduced Nkata and asked Robson if there was somewhere they could have a word with him, out of the noise of cars whooshing by just beyond the hedge. Robson said yes, yes, of course. If they'd follow him .. . ? "The front door's warped," he said, "We haven't replaced it yet. We'll need to go in through the back." Through the back took them along a brick path that led into a good sized garden. This was overgrown with weeds and grass, edged by herbaceous borders long gone to ruin and dotted with trees that hadn't been pruned in years. Beneath them, wet fallen leaves were rotting to join their brothers from seasons past in the soil. In the midst of all the chaos and decay, however, a ne wish building stood. Robson saw both Lynley and Nkata giving this a look-over and he said, "That was our first project. We do furniture in there." "Building it?" "Restoring it. We mean to do the house as well. Doing up furniture and selling it gives us something of a kitty to work from. Restoring a place like this with a nod at the imposing edifice 'takes a fortune. Whenever we get enough saved to do a room, we do it. It's taking forever, but no one's in a hurry. And there's a certain camaraderie that develops when everyone's behind a project, I think." Lynley wondered at the word camaraderie. He'd been thinking Robson's us referred to his wife and family, but 'developing camaraderie' suggested something else. He considered the vehicles he'd seen in front of the building and said, "This is a commune, then?" Robson unlocked the door and swung it open onto a passageway with a wooden bench running along its wall and adult sized Wellingtons lined up beneath it and hooks holding jackets on the wall above it. He said, "That sounds like something from the summer-of-love era. But yes, I suppose you could call it a commune. Mostly it's a group with shared interests." "Which are?" "Making music and turning this house into something we can all enjoy." "Not restoring furniture?" Nkata asked. "That's merely a means to an end. Musicians don't make enough money to finance a restoration like this one without something else to fall back on." He allowed them into the passage before him, shutting the door when they were inside and locking it scrupulously behind them. He said, "This way," and led them into what might once have been the dining room but now was a musty combination of draughting room, store room, and office, with water-stained wallpaper covering the upper half of the walls and battered wainscoting covering the lower half. A computer was part of the office function that the room was serving. From where he stood, Lynley could see the telephone line that was plugged in to it. He said, "We've tracked you through a message you left on the answer machine of a woman called Eugenie Davies, Mr. Robson. This was four days ago. At eight-fifteen in the evening." Next to Lynley, Nkata got out his leather notebook and his propelling pencil, twisting it to produce a micro-millimetre of lead. Robson watched him do this then walked to a worktable on which a set of blueprints was spread. He smoothed his hand over the top one as if to study it, but he answered the question with the single word. "Yes." "Do you know she was murdered three nights ago?" "Yes. I know." His voice was low and his hand grasped a blueprint that was still rolled up. His thumb played along the rubber band that held it formed into a tube. "Richard told me," he said, lifting his gaze to Lynley. "He'd been to tell Gideon when I arrived for one of our sessions." "Sessions?" "I teach the violin. Gideon's been my pupil since childhood. He isn't any longer, of course; he's no one's pupil. But we play together three hours a day when he's not recording, rehearsing, or touring. You've heard of him, doubtless." "I was under the impression he hasn't played in several months." Robson's hand had reached out to touch the opened blueprint again, but he hesitated and did nothing more with the gesture. He said on a heavy sigh, "Sit down, Inspector. You as well, Constable," and he turned back to them. "It's important not only to keep up appearances in a situation like Gideon's, but it's also important to go on normally as much as possible. So I still turn up for our daily three hours together and we keep hoping that when enough time passes, he'll be able to go back to the music." ' "We?" Nkata raised his head to look for the answer. "Richard and I. Gideon's father." Somewhere in the house, a scherzo began. Dozens of energetic notes ran riot on what sounded like a harpsichord at first but then abruptly changed to an oboe and then just as abruptly altered to a flute. This was accompanied by an increase in volume and the sudden rhythmic pounding of several percussion instruments. Robson went to the door and shut it, saying, "Sorry. Janet's gone a bit mad over the electric keyboard. She's enthralled with anything a computer chip can do." "And you?" Lynley asked. "I haven't the money for a keyboard." "I meant computer chips, Mr. Robson. Do you use this computer? I see it has a telephone connection." Robson's gaze flicked to it. He crossed the room and sat at a chair that he drew out from the sheet of plywood which served as a desk top. At this, Lynley and Nkata also sat, unfolding two metal chairs and swinging them into position so that, with Robson, they formed a triangle near the computer. "We all use it," Robson said. "For e-mail? Chat rooms? Surfing the net?" "I mostly use it for e-mail. My sister's in Los Angeles. My brother's in Birmingham. My parents have a house on the Costa del Sol. It's an easy way for us to stay in contact." "Your address is .. . ?" "Why?" "Curiosity," Lynley said. Robson recited it, looking puzzled. Lynley heard what he'd suspected he'd hear when he saw the computer sitting in the room. Jete was Robson's online name and consequently part of his e-mail address. "You've been fairly distressed about Mrs. Davies, it seems," he said to the violinist. "Your message on her answer machine was agitated, Mr. Robson, and the last e-mail you sent her looked a bit frantic as well. "I must see you. I'm begging." Had you had some sort of falling out?" Robson's seat was a desk chair that swivelled, and he used it to rotate, to examine the computer's empty staring screen as if he could see his last message to Eugenie Davies there. He said, "You'd be checking everything. Of course. I see that," as if speaking to himself and not them. Then he went on in a normal tone with, "We parted quite badly. I said some things that .. ." He removed a handkerchief from his pocket, pressing it to his forehead where perspiration had begun to bead. "I expected I'd have a chance to apologise. We always think that, don't we? Even as I drove away from the restaurant and I was in a real fury, I admit it1 didn't drive off thinking That's it, I'm done with this business forever, she's a blind silly cow and that's the end of it. What I thought was, Oh God, she looks rotten, she's thinner than ever, why can't she see what that means, for God's sake." "Which was what?" Lynley asked. "That she'd made a decision in her head, yes, and it probably sounded like a sensible one to her. But her body was rebelling against that decision, which was her ... I don't know ... I suppose it was her spirit's way of trying to tell her to stop, to carry things not one inch farther. And you could see the rebellion in her. Believe me, you could actually see it. It wasn't just that she'd let herself go. God knows she'd done that years ago. She'd been quite lovely but to see her especially as she was in these last few years you'd never have realised how men would at one time slow down in the street as they passed her." "What decision had she made, Mr. Robson?" Lynley asked as Nkata scratched his head and tried to look patient. Robson said, "Come with me. I want to show you something," by way of answer. He took them from the house, out the same way they'd come in, out into the garden. He headed towards the building where he'd said the commune worked on their furniture. The building comprised a single large room in which battered pieces stood in various stages of restoration. It smelled strongly of sawdust, turpentine, and wood stain, and a patina of the dust that comes from heavy sanding lay like a gauze veil on everything. Footprints tracked back and forth across the dirty floor, from a workbench above which a set of newly cleaned tools gleamed with oil to a three-legged wardrobe that listed tiredly, sanded down to bare walnut, disembowelled, and awaiting the next stage of rejuvenation. "Here's my guess," Robson said. "Tell me how it matches to reality. I did a wardrobe for her. Cherry wood, it was. First rate. Beautiful. Not the sort of thing you see every day. I did her a commode as well, early eighteenth century. Oak. And a washstand. Victorian. Ebony with a marble top. One of the drawer pulls is missing but you wouldn't want to replace it because you couldn't match it and anyway leaving it without the pull actually gives-it more character. The wardrobe took the longest, because you don't ever want to refinish a piece unless there is no hope for it. You just want to restore it. So it was six months before I had it the way I wanted it and no one he nodded at the house to indicate his housemates 'was pleased that I was working on that instead of something we could make a profit on." Lynley frowned at this, knowing that there were lines upon lines being written by Robson and wondering how adept he himself would be to read between them in the time they had. He said, "You had a falling out with Mrs. Davies because of a decision she'd made. But I can't think her decision was about selling the pieces of furniture you'd done for her. Am I right?" Robson's shoulders dropped slightly, as if he'd been hoping that Lynley wouldn't be able to confirm what he himself suspected. He'd been clutching his handkerchief, and now he looked down at it as he said, "So she didn't keep them, did she? She didn't keep any of the pieces I gave to her. She sold them all and gave the money to charity. Or she just gave the furniture itself away. But she didn't keep it. That's what you're telling me." "She had no antiques in her house in Henley, if that's what you're wondering," Lynley said. "Her furniture was He looked for the right word to convey the manner in which Eugenie Davies' house in Friday Street had been furnished. "Spartan," he said. "Just like a nun's cell, I expect." Robson's words were bitter. "That's how she punished herself. But it wasn't enough, that sort of deprivation, so she was ready to take it to the next level." "What would that be?" Nkata had given up writing during Robson's recitation of the antiques he'd given to Eugenie Davies. The next level however, clearly promised more. "Wiley," Robson said. "The bloke from the book shop. She'd been seeing him for several years, but she'd decided it was time to .. ." Robson shoved his handkerchief into his pocket and gave his attention to the listing wardrobe. To Lynley's eyes, the piece didn't look even salvageable, with its missing leg and its gaping interior that showed a large jagged hole in its back, very much as if someone had taken an axe to it. "She was going to marry him if he asked her. She said that she believed she felt, she said, with women's bloody intuition, she said that they were heading towards it. I told her that if a man didn't bother to make an attempt... In three years, if he didn't try to make a move on her .. . God, I'm not talking about rape. Not shoving her into a wall and feeling her up. But just.. . He hadn't even tried to get close to her. He hadn't even talked about why he hadn't tried. They just went on their picnics, took their walks, rode the bus on those stupid pensioners' days out.. . And I tried to tell her that it wasn't normal. It wasn't red-blooded. So if she made it permanent with him, if she actually made herself his partner and took herself out of the sodding running .. ." Robson ran out of steam. His eyes became red-rimmed. "But I suppose that's what she wanted. To take up life with someone who couldn't begin to give her anything complete, who couldn't begin to give her what a man can give to a woman when she means everything to him." Lynley examined Robson as he spoke, saw the misery in the lines that etched their painful history on his patchy-skinned face. "When was the last time you saw Mrs. Davies?" "A fortnight ago. Thursday." "Where?" "Marlow. The Swan and Three Roses. Just outside of town." "And you didn't see her again? Did you speak to her?" "On the phone twice. I was trying to... I'd reacted badly to what she'd told me about Wiley and I knew it. I wanted to make things right between us. But it just got worse because I still wanted to talk to her about it, about him, about what it meant that he never.. . never once in three years .. . But she didn't want to hear. She didn't want to see. "He's a good man, Raphael," she kept saying, "and it's time now." "Time for what?" Robson continued as if Nkata hasn't asked the question, as if he himself were a silent Cyrano who'd waited long for an opportunity to unburden himself. He said, "I didn't disagree that it was time. She'd punished herself for years. She wasn't in prison but she may as well have been because she made her life a prison anyway. She lived one step away from solitary confinement, in complete self-denial, surrounding herself with people with whom she had nothing in common, always volunteering for the worst jobs, and all of it so that she could pay and pay and pay." "For what?" Nkata had been standing close to the door as he wrote, as if hoping a near contact with the outside environment might spare his fine wool charcoal suit from the worst of the dust that permeated the work room's air. But now he took a step closer to Robson, and he cast a glance towards Lynley who indicated with his hand that they would wait for the violinist to continue. Silence on their part was as useful a tool as silence on his part was revealing. Robson finally said, "When she was born, Eugenie didn't love her instantly the way she thought she was supposed to love her. At first she was just exhausted because the birth had been difficult and all she wanted was to recover from it. And that's not unnatural when a woman's been in labour so long thirty hours, it was and she's got nothing left in her even to cuddle a new born. That is not a sin." "I wouldn't disagree," Lynley said. "And they didn't know at first anyway, about the baby. Yes of course there were signs, but labour had been rough. She didn't come out pink and perfect like a birth that's been orchestrated for a Hollywood production. So the doctors didn't know till she was examined and then .. . Good God, anyone would be slaughtered by the news. Anyone would have to adjust and that takes time. But she thought she should have been different, Eugenie. She thought she should have loved her at once, felt like a fighter, had plans how to care for her, known what to do, what to expect, how to be. When she couldn't do that, she hated herself. And the rest of them didn't make it easier for her to accept the baby, did they, especially Richard's father that mad bastard who expected another prodigy from them and when he got the reverse .. . There was just too much for Eugenie to cope with. Sonia's physical problems, Gideon's needs which were mounting daily and what else could you expect when it comes to dealing with a prodigy? mad Jack's raving, Richard's second failure ' "Second failure?" Lynley asked. "Another damaged child, if you can believe it. He'd had an earlier one. From another marriage. So when a second one was born ... It was terrible for all of them but Eugenie couldn't see that it was normal to feel the anguish at first, to curse God, to do whatever one has to do to get through a bad time. Instead she heard her bloody father's voice, "God speaks to us directly. There is no mystery in His message. Examine your soul and your conscience to read God's handwriting therein, Eugenie." That's what he wrote to her, if you can believe it. That was his blessing and comfort on the birth of that pathetic little baby. As if an infant were a punishment from God. And there was no one to talk her out of feeling like that, do you see? Oh there was the nun, but she talked about God's will as if the entire situation were predetermined and Eugenie was meant to understand that, accept it, not to rage against it, grieve about it, feel whatever despair she needed to feel and then just get on with life. So then when the baby died .. . and the way she died ... I expect there were moments when Eugenie had actually thought "better she be dead than have to live like this, with doctors and operations and lungs failing and heart barely beating and stomach not working and ears not hearing and not even being able to shit properly for the love of God .. . Better she be dead." And then, she actually was dead. It was as if someone had heard her and granted a wish that wasn't a real wish at all but just an expression of one moment's despair. So what was she to feel but guilt? And what was she to do to make reparation but deny herself everything that might mean comfort?" "Until Major Wiley came along," Lynley noted. "I suppose so." Robson's words were hollow. "Wiley was a new beginning for her. Or at least that's how she said she thought of it." "But you disagreed." "I think he was just another form of imprisonment. But worse than before because he'd be wearing the guise of something new." "So you argued about it." "And then I wanted to apologise," Robson added. "I was desperate to apologise don't you see because we'd shared years of friendship, the two of us, Eugenie and I, and I couldn't see sending them down the drain because of Wiley. I wanted her to know that. That's all. For whatever it was worth." Lynley set these words against what he'd learned from both Gideon and Richard Davies. "She ended contact with her family long ago, but not with you, then? Were you and Mrs. Davies once lovers, Mr. Robson?" Colour flared into Robson's face, an unattractive smearing of crimson that battled with the various patches of his damaged skin. "We met twice a month," he said in answer. "Where?" "In London. In the country. Wherever she wanted. She asked for news of Gideon, and I provided it. That was the extent of what she and I had together." The pubs and hotels in her diary, Lynley thought. Twice each month. But it didn't make sense. Her meetings with Robson didn't follow the pattern that Robson himself described as being the path of Eugenie Davies' life. If she had been intent upon punishing herself for the transgression of human despair, for the unspoken wish so horribly granted to be delivered from the struggle to care for a fragile daughter, why had she even allowed herself news of her son, news that might comfort her, might keep her in touch? Wouldn't she have denied herself that? There was a piece missing somewhere, Lynley concluded. And his instincts told him that Raphael Robson knew exactly what that missing piece was. He said, "I can understand part of her behaviour, but I can't understand all of it, Mr. Robson. Why cut out contact with her family but maintain contact with you?" "As I said. It was how she punished herself." "For something she'd thought but never acted on?" It seemed that the answer to this simple question should have come easily to Raphael Robson. Yes or no. He'd spent years knowing the dead woman, after all. He'd engaged in regular meetings with her. But Robson didn't answer at first. He took a plane from among the tools instead, and he appeared to examine it with his long and thin musician's hands. "Mr. Robson?" Lynley said. Robson moved across the room to a window so covered in dust that it looked nearly opaque. He said, "She'd sacked her. It was Eugenie's decision That began everything. So she blamed herself." Nkata looked up. "Katja Wolff? Robson said, "Eugenie was the one who said the German girl had to go. If she hadn't made that decision .. . if they hadn't rowed .. ." He made an aimless gesture. "We can't relive a single moment, can we? We can't unsay things, and we can't undo things. We can only sweep up the pieces of the mess we make of our lives." True enough, Lynley thought, but the statements were also useful generalities that weren't going to take them one inch closer to the truth. He said, "Tell me about that time, before the baby was murdered. As you remember it, Mr. Robson." "Why? What's that got to do with ' "Humour me." "There isn't much to tell. It's a grubby little story. The German girl got herself pregnant, and she was badly out of sorts. She was sick each morning and half the time sick at noon and at night. Sonia demanded someone's full time attention, but Katja couldn't give it. She tried, God knows, but she got weaker and weaker. Not enough sleep. And she couldn't eat without sicking everything up. She was up with Sonia night after night, and she was trying to sleep when she got the chance. But she slept when she was meant to be doing something else once too often, and Eugenie sacked her. She snapped, then, did Katya. Sonia fussed too much one evening. And that was that." "Did you give evidence at the trial?" Nkata asked. "Yes. I was there. Yes. I gave evidence." "Against her?" "I just testified to what I'd seen, where I'd been, what I knew." "For the prosecution?" "Ultimately, I suppose. Yes." Robson shifted on his feet and waited for another question, his gaze on Lynley as Nkata wrote. When Lynley said nothing and the silence among them lengthened, Robson finally spoke. "What I'd seen was practically nothing. I'd been giving Gideon some instruction, and the first I knew that something was wrong was when Katja began screaming from the bathroom. People came charging from all corners of the house, Eugenie dialled nine-nine-nine, Richard tried the kiss of life." "And the fault went down to Katja Wolff," Nkata noted. "There was too much chaos to find fault anywhere at first," Robson said. "Katja was screaming that she hadn't left the baby alone, so it seemed as if she'd had some sort of seizure and died in an instant when Katja's back was turned, when she was reaching for a towel. Something like that. Then she said she'd been on the phone for a minute or two. But that fell through when Katie Waddington denied it. Then came the post mortem. It became clear how Sonia died and that there had been earlier.. . earlier incidents that no one knew about and .. ." He opened his hands as if saying, The rest is as it was. Lynley said, "Wolff is out of prison, Mr. Robson. Have you heard from her?" Robson shook his head. "I can't think she'd want to talk to me." "Talking might not be what she has in mind," Nkata said. Robson looked from him to Lynley. "You're thinking Katja might have killed Eugenie." Lynley said, "The investigating officer from that period of time was run over last night as well." "Good God." "We're thinking everyone needs to take care till we get to the bottom of what happened to Mrs. Davies," Lynley said. "She had something to tell Major Wiley, by the way, according to him. Would you have any idea what that was?" "None at all," Robson said, shaking his head but all the same saying the words far too quickly for Lynley's liking. As if realising that the speed of his reply was more revealing than the reply itself, Robson went on to say, If there was something she wanted to reveal to Major Wiley, she didn't tell me. You see, Inspector." Lynley didn't see. At least he didn't see what Robson hoped he would see. Instead, he saw a man holding something back. He said, "As Mrs. Davies' close friend, I'd think there might be something you've not yet considered, Mr. Robson. If you reflect on your most recent meetings with her and especially the last one when the two of you rowed, I expect a detail like a chance remark might give us an indication of what she wanted to tell Major Wiley." "There's nothing. Really. I can't say .. ." Lynley pressed on. "If what she had to tell Major Wiley is the reason she was killed and we can't dismiss that possibility, Mr. Robson anything you can remember is vital." "She might have wanted him to know about Sonia's death and what led up to her death. Perhaps she believed she needed to tell him why she'd left Richard and Gideon. She might have felt she needed his forgiveness for having done that before they could proceed with each other." "Would that have been like her?" Lynley asked. "The confessional bit before carrying on with a relationship, I mean." "Yes," Robson said and his affirmation seemed genuine. "Confession would have been exactly like Eugenie." Lynley nodded and thought this over. Part of it made sense, but he couldn't escape a simple fact that had announced itself through Robson's helpful revelation: They hadn't mentioned to Robson that Major Wiley had been in Africa twenty years ago and hence hadn't known the circumstances of Sonia Davies' death. But if Robson knew that, he probably knew more. And whatever that more was, Lynley was willing to wager it led to the death in West Hampstead. Gideon I NOVEMBER I object, Dr. Rose. I am not avoiding anything. You might question my pursuit of the truth with regard to my sister's death, you might remark that it serves the powerful interests of distraction for me to spend half a day to-ing and fro-ing round Cheltenham, and you might scrutinise my reasons for lolling round the Press Association Office for another three hours, copying and reading the cuttings about the arrest and the trial of Katja Wolff. But you cannot accuse me of avoiding the very activity you yourself assigned me in the first place. Yes, you told me to write what I remember, which is what I've done. And it seems to me that until I get beyond this business of my sister's death, it's going to throw up a block to any other memories that I might have. So I may as well get through all this. I may as well learn what happened back then. If this endeavour is an elaborate subconscious foil to what I am supposed to remember whatever the hell that is then we'll know that eventually, won't we? And in the meantime, you'll be all the richer for the countless appointments that you and I shall have had together. I may even become your patient for life. And don't tell me you sense my frustration, please, because I'm obviously frustrated because just when I think I'm on to something, you sit there asking me to think about the process of rationalisation and to ponder what that could mean in my current pursuit. I'll tell you what rationalisation means: It means that I am consciously or unconsciously sidestepping the reason for my loss of music. It means that I am setting up an elaborate maze to thwart your attempts to help me. So you see? I am completely aware of what I might be doing. And now I ask you to let me do it. I've been to Dad's. He wasn't there when I arrived, but Jill was. She's decided to paint his kitchen, and she'd brought a selection of paint cards with her, which she'd spread out on the kitchen table. I told her I'd come to go through some old paperwork that Dad keeps in the Granddad Room. She gave me one of those conspiratorial looks that suggest two people are in agreement on a subject that's going undiscussed, and from that I concluded that Dad's museum of devotion to his father is going to be packed away when he and Jill have a home of their own. She won't have told Dad this, naturally. Jill's way is not to be so direct. To me she said, "I hope you've got your gum boots with you." I smiled but made no reply, instead taking myself to the Granddad Room and closing the door behind me. I don't frequent this spot very often. It makes me uneasy to surround myself with such overwhelming evidence of my father's devotion to his father. I suppose I think that Dad's fervour for his father's memory is somewhat misguided. True, Granddad survived a prison camp, countless deprivations, forced labour, torture, and conditions suited more to an animal than a man, but he ruled my father's life with derision if not with an iron fist both before and after the war, and I have never been able to understand why Dad clings to his memory instead of burying him once and for all. It was because of Granddad, after all, that our lives were defined as they were defined in Kensington Square: Dad's superhuman employment history was because Granddad could not support himself, his own wife, and their standard of living; Mother's going out to work despite having given birth to a handicapped child was because the income Dad brought in to care for his own parents and the house and my music and my education was not sufficient; my own pursuit of music was encouraged and supported financially in the first place because Granddad decreed it would be so .. . And on top of all this always I can hear Granddad's accusation: Freaks, Dick! You produce nothing but freaks. So within the room, I avoided the display of Granddad memorabilia. I went instead to the desk from which Dad had taken the picture ofKatja Wolffand Sonia, and I opened the first of its drawers, which was filled to the top with papers and folders. What were you looking for? you ask me. Something to make me certain about what happened. Because I'm not certain, Dr. Rose, and with every piece of information I dig up, I find myself becoming that much less certain. I've remembered something about my parents and Katja Wolff. It's been triggered by my conversation with Sarah-Jane Beckett and by what followed, which was those additional hours in the Press Association Library. I found a diagram among those cuttings, Dr. Rose, a drawing of sorts that showed the previously healed injuries that Sonia had sustained over time. There was a fractured clavicle. There was a dislocated hip. An index finger had healed from a break, and a wrist showed evidence of a hairline fracture. I felt nausea overcome me when I read all this. In my mind one question rang out: How could Sonia have been injured by Katja by anyone without the rest of us knowing that something had happened to her? The papers said that under cross examination, the prosecution's expert witness a physician special ising in child abuse cases -admitted that an infant's bones, more easily given to fractures, are also more easily given to healing from those fractures without the intervention of a doctor. He admitted that, as he was not a specialist in the skeletal anomalies of the Down's Syndrome child, he could not deny that the fractures and dislocations that Sonia had sustained might have been connected to her disability. But under re-examination by the prosecution, he drove home the point that was central to his testimony: A child whose body is undergoing trauma is going to react to that trauma. For that reaction to go unnoticed and for that trauma to go untreated, someone is being derelict in his duty. And still Katja Wolffsaid nothing. Given an opportunity to rise to her own defence even to talk about Sonia's condition, her operations, and all the attendant problems she had that made her difficult and fussy and a source of nearly constant and inconsolable crying -Katja Wolff remained silent in the dock as the prosecutor for the Crown savaged her 'callous indifference to the suffering of a child', her 'single-minded self-interest', and 'the animosity that had sprung up between the German and her employer'. And that's when I remembered, Dr. Rose. We're having breakfast, which we eat in the kitchen and not the dining room. Only the four of us are present: Dad, my mother, Sonia, and I. I'm playing with my Weetabix, lining up slices of banana like cargo on a barge despite having been told to eat it and not to play, and Sonia is sitting in her highchair while Mother spoons baby food into her mouth. Mother says, "We can't keep putting up with this, Richard," and I look up from my Weetabix barge because I think she's cross that I'm still not eating and I think I'm about to be scolded. But Mother continues. "She was out till half past one again. We gave her a curfew, and if she can't stick to it ' "She has to have some evenings off," Dad says. "But not the following morning as well. We did have an agreement, Richard." And I understand from this that Katja is meant to be with us at breakfast, is meant to be feeding Sonia. She has failed to get up and go to my sister, so Mother is doing Katja's job. "We're paying her to care for the baby," Mother says. "Not to go dancing, not to go to the cinema, not to watch television, and certainly not to advance her love life under our roof." That's what I've remembered, Dr. Rose, that remark about Katja's love life. And I've also remembered what my parents said next. "She's not interested in anyone in this house, Eugenie." "Please don't expect me to believe that." I look between them first at Dad then at my mother and I feel something in the air that I can't identify, perhaps a sense of unease. And into this unease comes Katja in a rush. She is filled with apologies for having slept through her morning alarm. "I please to feed the little one," she says in her English which must become more broken whenever she's under stress. My mother says, "Gideon, would you take your cereal to the dining room, please?" and because of the undercurrents in the kitchen, I obey. But I pause to listen just out of sight and I hear my mother say, "We've already had one talk about your morning duties, Katja," and Katja says, "Please to let me feed the baby, Frau Davies," in a clear firm voice. It is the voice of someone unafraid of her employer, I realise now, Dr. Rose. And that voice suggests there are very good reasons for Katja not to be afraid. So I went to my father's flat. I said my hellos to Jill. I dodged certificates, display cases, and trunks containing my grandfather's belongings, and I homed in on my grandmother's desk, which Dad has used as his for years. I was looking for something that could confirm the connection between Katja and the man who'd made her pregnant. Because I'd finally come to see that if Katja Wolff maintained silence, she could have done so for only one possible reason: to protect someone. And that someone had to be my father, who had kept her photo for more than twenty years. I NOVEMBER 4:00 P.M. I did not progress far in my search. In the drawer that I'd opened, I discovered an accordion file of correspondence. Among the letters therein most of which comprised subjects having to do with my career there was one from a solicitor with a north London address. Her client Katja Veronika Wolff had authorised Harriet Lewis, to contact Richard Davies with regard to monies owed her. Since the terms of her parole forbade her to contact any member of the Davies family personally, Miss Wolff was using this legal channel as a conduit through which the matter could be satisfactorily settled. If Mr. Davies would be so kind as to phone Ms Lewis at the above listed number at his earliest convenience, this matter of money could be handled expeditiously and to everyone's satisfaction. Ms Lewis remained yours truly, et cetera. I studied this letter. It was less than two months old. The language in it did not appear to contain the sort of veiled threat one would expect from a solicitor with future litigation on his mind. It was all straightforward, pleasant, and professional. As such, it fairly screamed the question Why? I was pondering the possible answers to this question when Dad arrived at the flat. I heard him come in. I heard his voice and Jill's coming from the kitchen. Shortly afterwards, his footsteps marked his progress from the kitchen to the Granddad Room. When he opened the door, I was still sitting there with the accordion file open on the floor at my feet and the letter from Harriet Lewis in my hand. I made no attempt to hide the fact that I was going through my father's belongings, and when he crossed the room, saying sharply, "What are you doing, Gideon?" my reply was to hand him the letter and say, "What's behind this, Dad?" He flicked his gaze over it. He returned it to the accordion file and returned the file to the drawer before he replied. "She wanted to be paid for the time she spent in remand prior to the trial," he said. "The first month of the remand period constituted the notice we'd given her, and she wanted her money for that month as well as as interest on it." "All these years later?" "Perhaps a more pertinent remark would be: "After she murdered Sonia?" He pushed the desk drawer shut. "She was very sure of her place with our family, wasn't she? She never expected to be sacked." "You've no idea what you're talking about." "Have you answered that letter, then? Have you phoned those solicitors as requested?" "I've no intention of doing anything to revisit that period, Gideon." I nodded at the drawer where he'd returned the letter. "Someone apparently doesn't think so. Not only that, but despite what someone's supposed to have done to devastate your life, someone apparently has no compunction about re-entering it even via a solicitor. I don't understand why, unless there was something more between you than employer and employee. Because don't you think a letter like that indicates a sense of confidence that someone in Katja Wolffs position ought not to have with regard to you?" "What the hell are you getting at?" "I've remembered my mother talking to you about Katja. I've remembered her suspicions." "You've remembered rubbish." "Sarah-Jane Beckett says James Pitch ford wasn't interested in Katja. She says he wasn't actually interested in women at all. That leaves him out of the equation, Dad, which brings it down to you or Granddad, the only other men in the house. Or Raphael, I suppose, although I think both you and I know where Raphael's true affections lay." "What are you implying?" "Sarah-Jane says Granddad was fond of Katja. She says he hung about when she was nearby. But somehow I can't see Granddad managing more than calf-love. And that leaves you." "Sarah-Jane Beckett was a jealous cow," Dad replied. "She set her sights on Pitchford the day she walked into the house. One pear-shaped syllable out of his heavily tutored mouth and she thought she'd encountered the Second Coming. She was a social climber of the first order, Gideon, and before Katja entered our lives, nothing stood between her and the top of the mountain, which was that fool Pitchford. The last thing she'd have wanted was to see a relationship developing where she herself wanted one. And I assume you have enough basic human psychology under your belt to be able to think that one through." I was forced to do just that, sifting back through my time in Cheltenham to weigh what Sarah-Jane had said, placing it in the balance against what Dad was claiming now. Had there been a vindictive satisfaction in Sarah-Jane's comments about Katja Wolff? Or had she simply tried to accommodate a request that I myself had made? Surely, had I called upon her with no desire other than to re-establish a connection with her, she wouldn't have brought up Katja or that period of time on her own. And didn't the very cause of jealousy dictate that the object of the passion be derided at every opportunity? So if it was base jealousy that she felt, wouldn't she have sought to bring up the subject of Katja Wolff herself? And no matter what Sarah-Jane had felt for Katja Wolff twenty years ago, why would she still be wallowing in that feeling now? Tucked away in Cheltenham in her smartly decorated house, wife, mother, collector of dolls, she had little need to dwell on the past, hadn't she? Into my thoughts, Dad said roughly, "All right. That's it, then," in a tone that brought an abrupt end to my reflections. "This has gone on long enough, Gideon." "What?" I said. "This mucking about. This contemplation of your navel. I'm at my limit with it all. Come with me. We're going to deal with this head-on." I thought he meant to tell me something I'd not yet heard, so I followed him. I expected him to take me into the garden the better to have a confidential talk far out of earshot of Jill, who remained in the kitchen contentedly setting up paint samples along the window sill. But instead he went to the door of the flat, and from there to the street. He strode to his car that was parked midway between Cornwall Gardens and Gloucester Road. He said, "Get in," as he unlocked it. And when I hesitated, "God damn it, Gideon. You heard me. Get the hell in." I said, "Where are we going?" as he started the engine. He jerked the car into reverse and negotiated his way out of the space. We shot up Gloucester Road in the direction of those wrought iron gates that mark the entrance to Kensington Gardens. "We're going where we should have gone in the first place," he replied. He headed east along Kensington Road, driving in a way that I'd never seen him do. He veered round taxis and buses and once leaned on the horn when two women dashed across the street near the Albert Hall. A sharp left at Exhibition Road took us into Hyde Park. He gained even more speed along South Carriage Drive and maintained it the length of Park Lane afterwards. It wasn't until we'd got beyond Marble Arch that I realised where he was taking me. But I said nothing till he'd finally parked the car in the Portman Square underground car park, where he always went when I performed nearby. "What's the point in this, Dad?" I asked him, trying for patience where I had fear. "You're going to get past this nonsense," he told me. "Are you man enough to come with me or have you lost your bollocks along with your nerve?" He shoved open his door and stood waiting for me. I felt my insides go liquid at the thought of what the next few minutes might hold. But I got out of the car anyway. And we walked side by side along Wigmore Street, heading in the direction of Wigmore Hall. How did that feel? you ask me. What were you experiencing, Gideon? I was experiencing heading there that night. Only that night I'd been alone because I'd come directly from Chalcot Square. I'm walking along the street, and I haven't a clue what's in store for me. I'm nervous, but not more than usual before a performance. I've mentioned that, haven't I? My nerves? Funny, I can't remember having nerves when I ought to have had them: performing in public the very first time as a six year old, performing several times thereafter as a seven year old, playing for Perlman, meeting Menuhin .. . What was it about me then? How was I so capable of taking things in my stride? I lost that naive confidence somewhere along the line. So this night on the way to Wigmore Hall is no different to all those other nights I've lived through, and my expectation is that the nervous anticipation that precedes this concert will pass as it usually does, the moment I lift the Guarneri and the bow. I walk along and I think about the music, revisiting it in my head as I usually do. I haven't had a flawless rehearsal of this piece never have had one but I'm telling myself that muscle memory will guide my playing past the sections that have given me difficulty. Particular sections? you ask. The same sections each time? No. That's what's always been so peculiar about The Archduke. I never know which part of the piece is going to trip me up. It's been a field not cleared of land mines and no matter how slowly I've progressed over the rough terrain, I've always managed to encounter an explosive. So I move along the street, dimly hear the after-work crowd at one of the pubs I pass, and think about my music. My fingers actually find the notes although I carry the violin in its case, and in doing this, they somewhat calm my anxiety, which I mistakenly take as a sign that all will be well. I arrive ninety minutes early. Just before I round the corner to access the artists' entrance behind the concert hall, I can see up ahead extending over the pavement the covered glass entry of the hall itself, peopled at this moment only by pedestrians hurrying home from work. I run through the first ten measures of the Allegro. I tell myself what a simple good thing it is, really, to play music with two friends like Beth and Sherrill. I have no idea of what will happen to me in those ninety minutes that are left of my career. I am, if you will, an innocent lamb on his way to be slaughtered, without a sense of danger and somehow lacking the ability to scent blood in the air. On the way to the hall with Dad, I recalled all this. But there was no real immediacy to my trepidation because I knew already how the next few minutes would play out. As I did that night, we rounded the corner into Welbeck Street. We hadn't spoken since emerging from the underground car park. I took Dad's silence to mean grim determination. He probably took mine as acquiescence to the plan instead of resignation to what I knew would be the outcome. At Welbeck Way, we turned again, walking towards the red double doors above which the words Artistes Entrance are hewn into the stone pediment. I was thinking about the fact that Dad hadn't pondered his plan quite through. There would probably be people in the ticket booth at the front of the hall, but at this time of day the artists' entrance would be locked with no one near it to open it should we knock. So if Dad really wanted me to relive that night of The Archduke, he was going at it wrong, and he was about to be thwarted. I was on the point of telling him this when my steps faltered, Dr. Rose. First they faltered, then they stopped altogether, and nothing on earth could have prompted me to continue walking. Dad took my arm and said, "You won't get anywhere by running away, Gideon." He thought I was afraid, of course, overcome by anxiety, and unwilling to place myself into the jeopardy that the music ostensibly represented. But it wasn't fear that paralysed me. It was what I saw right in front of me, what I couldn't believe that I hadn't been able to dredge out of my mind before this moment, despite the number of times that I had played at Wigmore Hall in the past. The blue door, Dr. Rose. The same blue door that has flashed periodically in my memory and in my dreams. It stands at the top of a flight of ten steps, right next to the artists' entrance for Wigmore Hall. I NOVEMBER 10:00 P.M. It's identical to the door I've seen in my mind: bright blue, cerulean blue, the blue of a highland summer sky. It has a silver ring in the centre, two security locks, and a fanlight above it. Beneath that window is a lighting fixture, mounted centrally above the door. There is a railing along the steps, and this is painted like the door itself: that bright, clear, unforgettable blue that I had forgotten nonetheless. I saw that the door appeared to lead to a residence: There were windows next to it, with curtains hanging in them, and from below in Welbeck Way I could see that there were pictures of some sort hanging high on the walls. I felt a surge of excitement the likes of which I haven't felt in months perhaps in years as I realised that behind that door might very well lie the explanation for what had happened to me, the cause of my troubles, and the cure. I jerked myself out of Dad's grasp and bounded up those steps. Just as you have told me to do in my imagination, Dr. Rose, I tried that door although I could see before I did so that it could be opened only from the exterior by means of a key. So I knocked upon it. I pounded upon it. And it was opened. There my hopes for rescue ended. For the door was opened by a Chinese woman so small that at first I thought she was a child. I also thought she was wearing gloves till I saw that her hands were covered in flour. I had never seen her before. She said, "Yes?" and looked at me politely. When I said nothing, her gaze shifted down to my father who waited at the foot of the steps. "May I help you?" she asked, and she moved subtly as she spoke, placing her hip and the bulk of her weight what little of it there was -behind the door. I had no idea what to ask her. I had no idea why her front door had been haunting me. I had no idea why I'd gone bolting up the stairs so sure of myself, so damnably certain that I was nearing an end to my troubles. So I said, "Sorry. Sorry. There's been a mistake," although I added in what I already knew was a fruitless possibility, "Do you live here alone?" Certainly, I knew this was the wrong question the moment after I asked it. What woman in her right mind is going to tell a strange man on her doorstep that she lives alone even if she does? But before she could offer a reply to the question, I heard a man's voice asking from somewhere behind her, "Who is that, Sylvia?" and I had my answer. I had more than that because a moment after he asked the question, the man swung the door open wider and peered out. And I didn't know him any more than I knew Sylvia: a large bald gentleman with hands the size of most people's skulls. "Sorry. Wrong address," I told him. "Who d'you want?" he asked. "I don't know," I replied. Like Sylvia, he looked from me to my father. He said, "Not the way it sounded from the thrashing you gave to the door just now." "Yes. I'd thought.. ." What had I thought? That I was about to be given the gift of clarity? I suppose so. But there was no clarity in Welbeck Way. And when I said to Dad later, once the blue door was closed upon us, "It's part of the answer. I swear that it's part," his reply was a thoroughly disgusted, "You don't even know the damn question." Chapter Eighteen "Lynn Davies?" Barbara Havers produced her warrant card for the woman who'd answered the door of the yellow stucco building. It stood at the end of a line of terraced houses in Therapia Road, a split level Victorian conversion in an East Dulwich quadrant that Barbara had discovered was defined by two cemeteries, a park, and a golf course. "Yes," the woman replied, but she said the word as a question, and she cocked her head to one side, puzzled, when she looked at Barbara's identification. She was Barbara's own height which made her short -but her body looked fit under her simple clothing of blue jeans, trainers, and a fisherman's sweater. She would be the sister-in-law of Eugenie Davies, Barbara concluded, for Lynn looked about the same age as the dead woman, although the wiry hair that spilled round her shoulders and down her back was only just beginning to grey. "Could I have a word?" Barbara asked her. "Yes, yes, of course." Lynn Davies opened the door wider and admitted Barbara into an entrance whose floor was covered by a small, hooked rug. An umbrella stand stood in a corner there, next to it a rattan coat rack from which two identical raincoats hung, both bright yellow and edged in black. She took Barbara to a sitting room, where a bay window overlooked the street. In the alcove that the window comprised, an easel held a heavy sheet of white paper that bore smears of colour in the unmistakable style of finger painting. More sheets of paper these completed works of art hung on the walls of the alcove, stuck higgledy piggledy with drawing pins. The sheet on the easel was not a finished work, but it was dry, and it looked as if the artist had been startled in the midst of its creation, for three fingers of paint lurched down towards one corner while the rest of the piece was done in happy, irregular swirls. Lynn Davies said nothing as Barbara gave a look towards the alcove. She merely waited quietly. Barbara said to her, "You're related to Eugenie Davies by marriage, I expect." To which Lynn Davies said, "Not quite. What's this about, Constable?" and her brow furrowed in apparent concern. "Has something happened to Eugenie?" "You're not Richard Davies' sister?" "I was Richard's first wife. Please. Tell me. I'm getting rather frightened. Has something happened to Eugenie?" She clasped her hands in front of her, tightly, so that her arms made a perfect V along her torso. "Something must have done because why else would you be here?" Barbara readjusted her thinking, from Richard's sister to Richard's first wife to everything implied by Richard's first wife. She watched Lynn as she explained the whys and wherefores of New Scotland Yard's visit. Lynn was olive skinned, with darker crescents like coffee stains under her deep brown eyes. This skin paled slightly when she learned about the details of the hit and run in West Hampstead. She said, "Dear God," and walked to an ancient three piece suite. She sat, staring in front of her but saying to Barbara, "Please .. ." then nodding to the armchair next to which dozens of children's books were neatly stacked, How the Grinch Stole Christmas placed seasonably on the top. "I'm sorry," Barbara said. "I can see it's a shock." "I didn't know," Lynn said. "And it must have been in the papers, mustn't it? Because of Gideon. And because of... of how you say that she died. But I didn't see them the papers because I've not been coping as well as I thought I would and .. . Oh God. Poor Eugenie. To have it all end like this." This didn't seem at all to be the reaction of an embittered first wife thrown over for a second. Barbara said, "You knew her quite well, then." "I've known Eugenie for years." "When did you see her last?" "Last week. She came to the service for my daughter. That's why I haven't seen .. . why I didn't know .. ." Lynn rubbed the palm of her right hand hard against her thigh, as if this action could quell something within her. "Virginia, my daughter, died quite suddenly last week, Constable. I knew it could happen at any time. I'd known that for years. But somehow one is never quite as prepared as one hopes to be." "I'm sorry," Barbara said. "She was painting as she did each afternoon. I was in the kitchen making our tea. I heard her fall. I came running out. And that was .. . What do they call it, Constable? It. The great, long-expected visitation arrived, and I wasn't with her. I wasn't even there to say goodbye." Like Tony, Barbara thought, and it jolted her to have her brother shoot into her mind when she hadn't prepared herself to greet him. It was just like Tony, who had died alone without a single member of the family at his bedside. She didn't like to think about Tony, about his lingering illness or the hell that his death had brought into her family. She said only, "Kids aren't meant to die before their parents, are they," and she felt an attendant tightness in her throat. "The doctors said she was dead before she hit the floor," Lynn Davies told her. "And I know they mean to comfort me. But when you've spent most of your life caring for a child like Virginia always and forever a little one no matter how large she grew your world is still wrenched to pieces when she's taken, especially if you've simply stepped out of the room to see to her tea. So I haven't been able to read a paper much less a novel or a magazine and I haven't turned on the telly or the radio because although I'd like to distract myself, if I do that there's a chance I'll stop feeling and what I feel right now at this moment, if you can understand what I'm saying is how I stay connected to her. If you can understand." Lynn's eyes filled as she spoke. Barbara gave her a moment as she herself adjusted to what she was learning. Among the information she was indexing in her mind was the unimaginable fact that Richard Davies had apparently fathered not one but two disabled children. For what else could Lynn Davies possibly mean when she described her daughter as forever a little one? "Virginia wasn't Barbara searched for a word. There had to be a euphemism somewhere, she thought with frustration, and if she were from America -that great land of political correctness she would probably have known it. "She wasn't well?" she settled on saying. "My daughter was disabled from birth, Constable. She had the body of a woman and the mind of a three-year-old child." "Oh. Hell. I'm sorry to hear that." "Her heart wasn't right. We knew from the first it would fail her eventually. But her spirit was strong, so she surprised everyone and lived thirty-two years." "Here at home with you?" "It wasn't an easy life for either of us. But when I consider what might have been, I have no regrets. I gained more than I lost when my marriage ended. And ultimately, I couldn't blame Richard for asking for the divorce." "And then he remarried and had another .. ." Again, there was no useful catch phrase. Lynn supplied her own, saying, "A child imperfect as we measure perfection. Yes. Richard had another, and those who believe in a vengeful God might argue that he was being punished for having abandoned us, Virginia and me. But I don't think that's how God works. Richard wouldn't have asked us to leave in the first place if I'd only agreed to have more children." "Asked you to leave?" What a prince among men, Barbara thought. Here was something for a bloke to be proud of: having asked his wife and his retarded child to find themselves new digs. Lynn hastened to explain. "We lived with his parents, in the house he himself had grown up in. So when it came time to part, it didn't make sense that Virginia and I should stay with Richard's parents while Richard left. And, anyway, that was part of the problem: Richard's parents. His father was completely un moveable on the subject of Virginia. He wanted her put away. He insisted on it. And Richard was ... It was so important to him to have his father's approval. So he was won over to that way of thinking, about putting Virginia into a home. But I wouldn't hear of it. After all, this was .. ." Her eyes again showed her pain, and she stopped for a moment before saying with simple dignity, "She was our child. She hadn't asked to be born the way she was. Who were we to think we could chuck her away? And that's what Richard himself thought at first. Until his father changed his mind." She looked again to the alcove, to the bright smeared paintings that decorated it, saying, "He was a terrible man, Jack Davies was. I know he'd suffered horribly in the war. I know his mind was a ruin and he couldn't be blamed for the ugliness inside him. But to hate an innocent child so much that she wasn't allowed to be in the same room with him .. . ? That was wrong, Constable. That was terribly wrong." "It sounds like hell," Barbara acknowledged. "A form of it. "Thank God she doesn't spring from my blood," he used to say. And Richard's mother would murmur, "Jack, Jack, you don't actually mean that," when all the time you could see that if there was a single way that he could wipe Virginia's existence from this planet, he would have gladly made the attempt without a second thought." Lynn's lips trembled. "And now she's gone. Wouldn't Jack be happy now." She shoved her hand into the pocket of her blue jeans and brought out a crumpled tissue, which she pressed beneath her eyes, saying, "I'm terribly sorry. Forgive me for running on in this way. I shouldn't be ... God, how I miss her." "It's okay," Barbara said. "You're trying to cope." "And now Eugenie," Lynn Davies said. "How can I help with what's happened to Eugenie? That's why you've come, isn't it? Not just to tell me but to ask for my help?" "You and Mrs. Davies had a bond, I expect. Through your children." "Not at first. It was when her little Sonia died that we met. Eugenie simply turned up on my doorstep one day. She wanted to talk. I was happy to listen." "You saw her regularly then?" "Yes. She dropped round often. She needed to talk what mother wouldn't in those circumstances?-and I was glad to be here for her. She felt she couldn't talk to Richard, you see, and while there was a Catholic nun she was close to, the nun wasn't a mother, was she? And that's what Eugenie needed: another mother to talk to, and especially the mother of a special child. She was grieving terribly, and there was no one in that household who could understand how she felt. But she knew about me and she knew about Virginia because Richard had told her shortly after they married." "Not before they married? That's odd." Lynn smiled resignedly. "That's Richard, Constable Havers. He paid maintenance till Virginia reached adulthood, but he never saw her once she and I left him. I did think he might come to the funeral. I let him know when she died. But he sent flowers and that was that. ' "Brilliant," Barbara muttered. "He is who he is. Not a bad man, but not a man equipped to cope with a handicapped child. And not everyone is. At least I'd had some practical training in nursing while Richard.. . well, what did he have but his brief career in the army? And anyway, he wanted to carry on the family name, which meant, naturally, that he would have to find a second wife. And that actually turned out to be the right thing to do, didn't it, because Eugenie gave him Gideon." "The jackpot." "In a way. But I expect the burden of giving birth to a prodigy is an enormous one. A different set of responsibilities but just as heavy." "Eugenie didn't say?" "She never spoke much of Gideon. And then, when she and Richard divorced, she never spoke of Gideon at all. Or of Richard. Or of any of them. Mostly, when she came, she helped me with Virginia. She loved the parks, Virginia did, the cemeteries as well. It was our special joy to take a ramble in Camberwell Old Cemetery. But I didn't like to do it without someone else with us, to help keep an eye on Virginia. If I was there with her alone, I had to fix my attention on her and I got no pleasure from the afternoon. But with Eugenie there, it was easier. She would watch her. I would watch her. We could talk, bask in the sun, read the gravestones. She was very good to us." "Did you speak to her the day of Virginia's funeral?" Barbara asked. "Of course. Yes. But we didn't speak of anything that could help your enquiry, I'm afraid. Just about Virginia. The loss. How I was coping. Eugenie was a great comfort to me. Indeed, she'd been a comfort for years. And Virginia .. . She actually came to know Eugenie. To recognise her. To Lynn stopped. She rose and went to the alcove where she stood in front of the easel on which her daughter's final painting marked her quick passage from life into death. She said in a contemplative voice, "Yesterday I did several of these myself. I wanted to feel what had given her such joy. But I couldn't reach that place. I tried painting after painting till my hands were black from all the colours I'd mixed together, and still I couldn't feel it. So I finally saw how blessed she actually had been: to be eternally a child who asked so little of life." "There's ales son in that," Barbara agreed. "Yes. Isn't there." She studied the painting. Barbara stirred in her seat, wanting to bring Lynn Davies back. She said, "Eugenie'd been seeing a bloke in Henley, Mrs. Davies. A retired army bloke called Ted Wiley. He owns the book shop across the street from her house. Did she ever speak of him?" Lynn Davies turned from the painting. "Ted Wiley? A book shop? No. She never talked of Ted Wiley." "Of anyone else she might have been involved with?" Lynn thought about this. "She was careful with what she revealed about herself. She'd always been that way. But I think... I don't know if this is any help, but the last time we spoke this would be before I rang to tell her about Virginia's passing she mentioned.. . Well, I don't know if it actually meant anything. At least I don't know if it meant she'd become involved." "It might be of help," Barbara told her. "What did she say?" "It wasn't so much what she said but the way she said it. There was a lightness to her voice that I'd never heard before. She asked me if I believed that one could fall in love where one wasn't expecting to find love. She asked me if I thought that years could pass and one could suddenly look upon someone in a light entirely different from the way one had looked on him in the past. She asked me if I thought love could grow from that, from that new way of looking. Could she have been talking about the army man? Someone she'd known for years but never thought of as a lover till now?" Barbara wondered about this. It did seem likely. But there was something more to consider: Eugenie Davies' whereabouts at the time of her death and the address in her possession suggested something else. She said, "Did she ever mention James Pitchford?" Lynn shook her head. "What about Pitchley? Or Pytches, perhaps?" "She didn't mention anyone by name. But that's how she was: a very private person." A very private person who'd ended up murdered, Barbara thought. And she wondered if the dead woman's need for privacy was at the core of her killing. DCI Eric Leach listened to the sister in charge of the intensive care unit at Charing Cross Hospital as she essentially told him the worst. No change was what they said when the doctors were handing over the reins of someone's condition to God, fate, nature, or time. It was not what they said when someone made some sort of progress, side-stepped the grim reaper, or achieved a sudden and miraculous recovery. Leach hung up the phone and turned from his desk, brooding. He brooded not only over what had happened to Malcolm Webberly but also over his own inadequacies and what they were doing to his ability to anticipate the investigation's twists and turns. He had to deal with the problem of Esme. That much was clear. How to deal with it would come to him soon. But that he had to deal with it was obvious. Because had he not been distracted by Esme's fears about her mum's new boyfriend not to mention by his own feelings about Bridget having found a replacement for him he surely would have remembered that J. W. Pitchley, aka James Pitchford had also once been Jimmy Pytches whose ties to a infant's death in Tower Hamlets had long ago been the subject of the London tabloids' delight. Not when that infant died, of course, that situation having sorted itself out soon enough after the post mortem. But years later, after another child died in Kensington. Once that pug-like Yard woman had revealed this titbit, Leach had remembered it all. He'd tried to tell himself that he'd deleted the information from his memory banks because it hadn't amounted to anything but aggro for Pitchford during the investigation into the Davies baby's death. But the truth was, he should have remembered it, and it was down to Bridget and Bridget's boyfriend and especially Esme's anxiety over Bridget's boyfriend that he hadn't. And he couldn't afford not to remember what he needed to remember about that long ago case. Because it was seeming to him more and more probable that that case had a link to this one which was unlikely to be easily severed. A PC popped his head into his office doorway, saying, "We've got that bloke from West Hampstead you were asking for, sir. D'you want him in an interview room?" "Got his brief with him?" "What else?" he said. "I don't expect he takes a dump in the morning without checking with his solicitor to see how many sheets of toilet paper he's got a right to use." "Make it an interview room, then," Leach said. He didn't like allowing solicitors to think they'd somehow intimidated him, and showing Pitchley-Pitchford-Pytches into his office felt like something that would do just that. He took a few minutes to make the call that would release Pitchley's motor to him. There was nothing more to be gained by holding the Boxster, and it seemed to Leach that their possession of past details about James Pitchford and Jimmy Pytches was more likely to chisel information from the man than was their continuing to hold on to his car. After the call, he grabbed a cup of coffee and went to the interview room where Pitchley-Pitchford-Pytches Leach was beginning to think of him as P-Man for simple ease of keeping track of all his names and his solicitor were waiting, seated at the interview table. Azoff was smoking despite the sign expressly forbidding it, his way of sneering 'bugger you for ten pence," while P-Man was working his hands through his hair like someone trying to rolf his brain. "I've advised my client to say nothing," Azoff began, eschewing anything that might have gone for a greeting. "He's cooperated thus far with no sign on your part of recompensing him in any way." "Recompensing?" Leach said incredulously. "What d'you think this is, man? We're running a murder enquiry here, and if we need your boy to assist us, we're going to bloody well have him." "I see no reason to carry on with these meetings if he's not going to be charged with something," Azoff countered. At which, P-Man looked up, mouth open, his face a veritable picture of 'what the hell are you saying, you berk?" Leach liked this because a man who was innocent would hardly look at his solicitor like a back-alley thug with a garrote in his hand just because the lawyer said the words 'charge him'. A man who was innocent would wear an expression saying, "Yeah. Got that, Jack?" and he'd direct that expression at the cop. But P-Man wasn't doing that, which made Leach more certain than ever that he needed to be broken. He wasn't sure what breaking him would actually achieve, but he was more than willing to try it. He said, "Well. Right. Mr. Pytches," quite affably. To which Azoff said, "Pitchley," with an irritation that he underscored with a gust of tobacco smoke blown into the air, carrying on it the accompanying olfactory tincture of advanced halitosis. Leach said, "Ah. Doesn't know it all, then, does he?" to P-Man with a nod at the solicitor. "Got some nooks and crannies in the skeleton cupboard you've not shone a torch into, yes?" P-Man sank his head into his hands, body language for his sudden realisation that his bollocksed up life had just become a degree more bollocksed up. "I've told you everything I can tell you," he said, sidestepping the Jimmy Pytches issue. "I've not seen that woman I've not seen any of them since six months after the trial. I moved on. Well, what else could I do? New house, new life ' "New name," Leach said. "Just like before. But Mr. Azoff here doesn't seem to know that a bloke like you with a past like yours has a way of getting sucked into events, Mr. Pytches. Even when he thinks he's weighted that past in concrete boots and chucked it into the Thames." "What the hell are you on about, Leach?" Azoff said. "Get rid of that shit burner you've got in your mouth, and I'll do what I can to elucidate," Leach said. "This is a non-smoking area and I presume that reading is one of your talents, Mr. Azoff." Azoff took his time about removing the cigarette from his mouth, and he took even more time to dislodge its ash against the sole of his shoe, carefully so as to preserve the remaining tobacco for his later pleasure. During this performance, P-Man, unbidden, unspooled most of his story for the solicitor. At the end of a recitation that was as brief and as positively slanted as possible, P-Man said, "I've not mentioned this cot death business before because there was no need, Lou. And there's still no need. Or at least there wouldn't be if this a jerk of his head at Leach indicated that the demonstrative pronoun was as close as P-Man intended to come to dignifying Leach's presence by actually giving him a name 'hadn't made up his mind to something that bears no relationship whatsoever to the truth." "Pytches," Azoff said, and while he sounded thoughtful as he said the name, his narrowing eyes suggested that his thoughts had less to do with absorbing a new piece of information than they had to do with what he planned as a disciplinary measure for a client who continued to withhold facts from him, making him look like a fool each time he was forced to face the police. "You say another kid who died, Jay?" "Two kids and a woman," Leach reminded him. "And counting, by the way. Another victim got hit last night. Where were you, Pytches?" "That's not fair!" P-Man cried. "I haven't seen a single one of those people ... I haven't talked to ... I don't know why she had my address with her .. . And I certainly don't believe ' "Last night," Leach repeated. "Nothing. Nowhere. At home. Where the hell else would I be when you've got my car?" "Picked up by someone, perhaps," Leach said. "Who? Someone I supposedly joined for a nice dash round London for a quick hit and run?" "I don't think I mentioned it was hit and run." "Don't make yourself out to be so bloody clever. You said another victim. You said another hit. You can't expect me to think you meant hitting someone with a cricket bat, can you? Else why would I be here?" He was getting hot under the collar. Leach liked that. He also liked the fact that P-Man's brief was just cheesed off enough to let him twist in the wind for a minute or two. That could be distinctly useful. He said, "Good question, Mr. Pytches." "Pitchley," P-Man said. "What have you seen of Katja Wolff lately?" "Kat P-Man halted himself. "What about Katja Wolff?" he asked, quietly cautious. "I had a look through ancient history this morning and I found you never gave evidence at her trial." "I wasn't asked to give evidence. I was in the house but I didn't see anything and there was no reason ' "But the Beckett woman did. The boy's teacher. Sarah-Jane she was called. My notes have I mentioned that I keep all my records from investigations?-show that you and she were together when the kid got the chop. You were together, which must mean you both saw everything or nothing at all, but in any event ' "I didn't see anything." ' in any event," Leach continued forcefully, "Beckett gave evidence while you stayed mum. Why was that?" "She was the boy's teacher. Gideon. The brother. She saw more of the family. She saw more of the little girl. She saw what kind of care Katja gave her, so she must have thought she had something to contribute. And listen, I wasn't asked to give evidence. I spoke to the police, I gave my statement, I waited for more but I wasn't asked." "Convenient, that." "Why? Are you trying to suggest ' "Plug it," Azoff said finally. And to Leach, "Get to the point or we're off." "Not without my motor," P-Man said. Leach fished in his jacket pocket and brought out the release form for the Boxster. He laid it on the table between himself and the two other men. He said, "You were the only one from that house who didn't give evidence against her, Mr. Pytches. I'd 've thought she'd've dropped in to say thank you now that she's out of the coop." "What're you on about?" P-Man cried. "Beckett gave character evidence. Talked to us and to everyone else about which wires in Katja Wolff s circuits were fraying. Bit of temper here. Dash of impatience there. Other things to do when the baby needed looking after. Not always on her toes the way a properly trained nanny would be. And then getting herself in the club .. ." "Yes? So? What about it?" P-Man said. "Sarah-Jane saw more than I saw. She talked about that. Am I supposed to be her conscience or something? Twenty odd years after the fact?" Azoff intervened. "We're looking for a point to this confab, DCI Leach. If there isn't one, we'll have that paperwork and be off." He reached for it. Leach pressed his fingers along its edge. "The point is Katja Wolff," he said. "And our boy's ties to her." "I have no ties to her," P-Man protested. "I'm not sure about that. Someone got her pregnant, and I'm not putting a fiver on the Holy Ghost." "Don't blame that on me. We lived in the same house. That's all. We nodded on the staircase. I might have given her the odd lesson with her English and, yes, I might have admired.. . Look. She was attractive. She was sure of herself, confident, not the way you'd expect a foreigner who didn't even speak the language to feel or act. That's always nice to see in a woman. And for God's sake, I'm not blind." "Had a bit of a thing with her, then. Tip-toeing round the house at night. Once or twice behind the garden she'd, and ooops, look what happened." Azoff slapped his hand on the table between them. He said, "Once, twice, eighty-five times. If you're not intending to talk about the case in hand, we're off. You got that?" "This is the case in hand, Mr. Azoff, especially if our boy spent the last twenty years brooding about a woman he diddled and then didn't do a thing to help once she'd - A - got herself up the spout thanks to him and B got herself charged with murder. He might want to make amends for that. And what better way than to give a hand in a spot of revenge. Which she might think she's owed, by the way. Time passes a bit slow inside, you know. And you'd be dead surprised to see the way that slow time makes a killer decide she's the injured party." "That's .. . that is utterly .. . that's preposterous," P-Man sputtered. "Is it?" "You know it is. What's supposed to have happened?" "Jay," Azoff counselled. "She's supposed to have tracked me down, rung my bell one night, and said, "Hello, lim. Know we haven't seen each other for twenty, but how about helping me rub out a few people? Just for a laugh, this is. Not too busy, are you?" Is that how you picture it, Inspector?" "Shut up, Jay," Azoff said. "No! I've spent half my life scouring the walls when I'm not the one who's pissed on them and I'm tired of it. I'm God damn bloody tired. If it's not the police, then it's the papers. If it's not the papers, it's He stopped himself. "Yes?" Leach leaned forward. "Who is it, then? What's the nasty you've got back there, Mr. P? Something beyond that cot death, I reckon. You're a real man of mystery, you are. And I'll tell you this much: I'm not finished with you." P-Man sank back in his chair, his throat working. Azoff said, "Odd. I don't hear a caution, Inspector. Forgive me if I lapsed into momentary unconsciousness sometime during this meeting, but I don't recall having heard a caution yet. And if I won't be hearing one in the next fifteen seconds, it's my suggestion that we make our farewells now, heartrending though those farewells may be." Leach shoved the Boxster's paperwork at them. He said, "Don't plan any holidays, Mr. P." And to Azoff, "Keep that fag unlit till you're on the street or I'll have you." "Cor. Blimey. I'm ackshully pissing me pants, guvnor," Azoff said. Leach started to speak, then stopped himself. Then he said, "Get out," and saw to it that they did just that. J.W. Pitchley, aka Tongue Man aka James Pitchford, aka Jimmy Pytches said his goodbye to Lou Azoff in front of the Hampstead police station, and he knew that this was a final one. Azoff was cheesed off about the Jimmy Pytches revelation, more cheesed off than he'd been by the James Pitchford revelation, and despite the fact that he'd been declared blameless of the death of both children first as Pytches and then as Pitchford, that wasn't 'the issue', as Azoff put it. He wasn't about to put himself in the position of getting sucker punched again by something that his client was withholding from him, Azoff said. How'd he think it felt, sitting in there with a sodding copper who'd probably not even passed his bleeding O-levels for Christ's sake, and having the rug pulled out without even knowing there was a rug in the room? This effing situation wasn't on, Jay. Or is it James? Or Jimmy? Or someone else, for that matter? It wasn't someone else. He wasn't someone else. And even if Azoff hadn't said, "You'll get my final bill by special courier tomorrow," he himself would have put the full stop to their legal dealings. No matter that he handled the labyrinth that was Azoff s tricky financial position. He could find someone else in the City equally talented at moving Azoff s money round faster than the Inland Revenue could track it. So he said, "Right, Lou," and he didn't bother to try to talk the solicitor out of quitting. He couldn't blame the poor sod, really. Who could expect someone to want to play defence on a team that wouldn't give directions to the pitch? He watched Azoff wind his scarf round his neck and fling its end over his shoulder, like the denouement of a play that had already gone on far too long. The solicitor made his exit, and Pitchley sighed. He could have told Azoff that sacking him had not only already crossed his mind but had also planted itself there half way through the interview with DCI Leach, but he decided to let the solicitor have his moment. The drama of quitting on the streets of Hampstead was meagre compensation for having endured the ignominy of ignorance to which Pitchley's omission of certain facts had recently exposed him. But it was all that Pitchley had to offer at the moment, so he offered it and stood, head bowed, while Azoff railed and till Azoff did his bit with the scarf. "I'll get on to a bloke I know who'll see you right with your money," he told the solicitor. "You do just that," Azoff said. He made no similar offer on his part: recommending another solicitor willing to take on a client who asked him to work in the dark. But then Pitchley didn't expect him to. Indeed, he'd given up expecting anything. That hadn't always been the case, although if it couldn't be said that he'd had expectations years ago, it could be said that he'd possessed dreams. She'd told him hers in that breathless, confiding, cheerful whisper, after hours when they had their English lessons and their chats at the top of the house, one ear to the speaker from the baby's room so that if she stirred, if she cried, if she needed her Katja, her Katja would be there, fast as could be. She said, "There are these fashion-for-clothes schools, yes? For design of what to wear. Yes? You see? And you see how I make these fashion drawings, yes? This is where I study when the money is saved. Where I come from, James, clothing .. . Oh, I cannot say, but your colours, your colours.. . And see at this scarf I have bought. This is Oxfam, James. Someone gave it away!" And she would bring it out and whirl it like an eastern dancer, alength of worn silk with its fringe coming loose but to her a fabric to be turned into a sash, a belt, a drawstring bag, a hat. Two such scarves and she had a blouse. Five and a motley skirt emerged. "This I am meant to do," she would say, and her eyes were bright and her cheeks were flushed and the rest of her skin was velvet milk. All London wore black, but never Katja. Katja was a rainbow, a celebration of life. And because of all that, he had dreams himself. Not plans as she had, not something spoken, but something held on to like a feather that will soil and be useless for flight if grasped too tightly or for too long. He wouldn't move quickly, he'd told himself. They were both young. She had her schooling ahead of her and he wanted to establish himself in the City before taking on the sort of responsibilities that came with marriage. But when the time was right .. . Yes, she was the one. So completely different, so completely capable of becoming, so eager to learn, so willing no, so desperate to escape who she'd been in order to achieve who she believed she could become. She was, in effect, his female counterpart. She didn't know that yet and she never would if he had his way, but in the unlikely event that she discovered that fact, she was a woman who would understand. We all have our hot air balloons, he would tell her. Had he loved her? he wondered. Or had he merely seen in her his best chance for a life where her foreign background would cast a useful shadow in which he could hide? He didn't know. He'd never got a chance to find out. And at a distance of two decades, he still didn't know how it might have worked out between the two of them. But what he did know without a single doubt was that at long last he'd had enough. With the Boxster in his possession, he began the drive that he knew was a journey that had been long in coming. It took him across London, first dropping down out of Hampstead and veering in the direction of Regent's Park, then wending his way eastward, ever eastward, to arrive in that Hades of postal codes: E3 where his nightmares had their roots. Unlike many areas of London, Tower Hamlets had not become gentrified. Films made here did not feature actors who batted their eyelashes, fell in love, lived arty lives, and lent an air of genteel down-at-heel glamour to the place, thus resulting in its renaissance at the hands of yuppies in Range Rovers yearning to be trendy. For the word renaissance implied that a place had once seen better times to which an infusion of cash would return it. But to Pitchley's eyes, Tower Hamlets had been a dump from the moment its first building had its initial foundation stone set into place. He'd spent more than half his life trying to scrub the grime of Tower Hamlets from beneath his fingernails. He'd worked at jobs not fit for man or beast since his ninth birthday, squirrel ling away whatever he could towards a future he wanted but couldn't quite define. He'd endured bullying at a school where learning took a distant seventh place to tormenting teachers, demolishing ancient and nearly useless equipment, graffitiing every available inch, shagging birds on the stairwells, setting fires in the dust bins, and pinching everything from the third formers' sweets money to the Christmas collection taken each year to give a decent meal to the area's homeless drunks. In that environment, he'd forced himself to learn, a sponge for whatever might get him out of the inferno that he'd come to assume was his punishment for a transgression he'd committed in a previous lifetime. His family didn't understand his passion to be free of the place. So his mother unmarried as she always had been and would be to her grave -smoked her fags all day at the window of the council flat, collected the dole like it was owed to her for doing the nation the favour of breathing, raised the six offspring that were got by four fathers, and wondered aloud how she'd managed to produce such agit as Jimmy, all neat and tidy like he actually thought he was something other than a yobbo in disguise. "Lookit 'im, will you?" she'd ask his siblings. "Too good for us, our Jim. Wha's it to be today, laddie?" as she looked him over "Riding to the 'ounds, are we?" He'd say, "Aw, Mum," and feel misery climbing from his navel up his chest and into his jaws. "Tha's all right, lad," she'd reply. "Just pinch one of them nice doggies so we'll 'ave a watcher round these ol' digs, okay? Tha'd be nice, now, wouldn't it, kids? "Ow'd you like our Jimmy to pinch us a dog?" "Mum, I'm not going fox hunting," he'd say. And they'd laugh. Laugh and laugh till he wanted to thrash the lot of them for being so useless. His mother was the worst because she set the tone. She might have been clever. She might have been energetic. She might have been capable of doing something with her life. But she got herself a baby Jimmy himself when she was fifteen and that's when she learned that if she kept having them, she'd be paid. Child allowance was what they called it. What Jimmy Pytches called it was Government Chains. So he made his life's purpose the demolition of his past, taking every odd job he could get his mitts on as soon as he was able to do so. What the job was didn't matter to him: cleaning windows, scrubbing floors, vacuuming carpets, walking dogs, washing cars, babysitting. He didn't care. If he was paid to do it, do it he would. Because although money couldn't buy him better blood, it could get him miles from the blood that threatened to drown him. Then came that cot death, that God awful moment when he went into her bedroom because it was long past the time she generally woke up from her nap. And there she was like a plastic doll, with one hand curled to her mouth like she'd been trying to help herself breathe for God's sake and her tiny fingernails were blue were blue were bluest of blue and he knew right then that she was a goner. Crikey, he'd been in the sitting room, hadn't he? He'd been right next door. He'd been watching Arsenal. He'd been thinking, Lucky day, this is, the brat's well away and I won't have to fuss with her during the game. He'd thought that the brat but he didn't mean it, never would have said it, actually smiled when he saw her in her push chair at the local grocery with her mum. He never thought 'the brat' then. Just, Here's lit'le Sherry and her mum. Hello, Chubbychops. Because that's what he called her. He called her a nonsense name, Chubbychops. Then she was dead and the police were there. Questions and answers and tears all round. And what kind of monster was he who watched Arsenal while a baby was dying and who even to this day remembered the score? There were whispers, of course. There were rumours as well. Both fuelled his passion to be gone forever. And forever was what he thought he'd achieved, a kind of eternal paradise defined by a Dutch-fronted house in Kensington, the kind of house so grand it had a medallion carved 1879 on its gable. And this house was peopled as grandly as it was situated, much to his delight. A war hero, a child prodigy on the violin, a for-God's-sake governess for that child, a foreign nanny .. . Nothing could have been more different to where he'd come from: Tower Hamlets via a bed sit in Hammersmith and a fortune spent on learning everything from how to say haricots verts and knowing what it meant to how to use cutlery instead of one's fingers for moving bits of food round one's plate. So when he'd finally reached Kensington Square, no one knew. Least of all Katja who would never have known, having not had a lifetime of instruction on what it meant to say lounge at an inopportune time. And then she'd got pregnant, the worst sort of getting pregnant. Unlike his mum, who'd carried on during her pregnancies as if growing a child inside her body were nothing more than a minor inconvenience causing her to switch to a different set of clothes for a few months, Katja'd had no easy time of it, which made her condition impossible to hide. And from that pregnancy had risen everything else, including his own past, threatening to seep from the splitting pipes of their life in Kensington Square like the sewage it was. Even after all that, he'd thought he could escape it again. James Pitchford, whose past had hung over him like Damocles' sword, just waiting to be smeared across the tabloids as Lodger Once Investigated in Cot Death, just waiting to be revealed as Jimmy Pytches: all aitches dropped and tee-aitches said as effs, Jimmy Pytches the subject of laughter for trying to be better than he was. So he changed again, morphed himself into J.W. Pitchley, ace investor and financial wizard, but running, always running, and always to run. Which brought him to Tower Hamlets now: a man who'd come to accept the fact that to escape what he could not bear to face, he could kill himself, he could change his identity yet again, or he could flee forever, not only the teeming city of London but everything that London and England represented. He parked the Boxster near the tower block that had been his childhood home. He looked round and saw that little had changed, including the presence of local skin heads, three of them this time, who smoked in the doorway of a nearby shop, watching him and his car with studied attention. He called out to them, "Want to make ten quid?" One of them spat a gob of yellowish sputum into the street. "Each?" he said. "All right. Each." "What's to do, then?" "Keep an eye on the motor for me. See that no one touches it. OK?" They shrugged. Pitchley took this for assent. He nodded at them saying, "Ten now, twenty later." "Let's 'ave it," said their leader and he slouched over for the cash. As he handed the ten pound note over to the thug, Pitchley realised the bloke might well be his youngest half brother, Paul. It had been more than twenty years since he'd seen little Paulie. What an irony it would be if he were handing over what went for extorted dosh to his own brother without either of them knowing who the other was. But that was the case for most of his siblings now. For all he knew, there might even be more of them than the five there were when he did his runner. He entered the tower block estate: a patch of dead lawn, chalk hopscotch squares drawn drunkenly on the uneven tarmac, a deflated football with a knife gouge in it, two shopping trolleys overturned and rendered wheel-less. Three little girls were attempting to inline skate on one of the concrete paths, but its condition was as bad as the tarmac's, so they'd get about two and a half yards of even ground to glide on before they had to clomp over or around a spot where the concrete looked as if the bomb squad might want to come to have a look for a UXB. Pitchley made his way to the lift and found that it was out of service. A block lettered sign informed him of this, hanging on old chrome doors long ago decorated by the resident spray paint artists. He set off up the stairs, seven flights of them. She loved as she said' 'having me bit of a view." This was important since she never did anything but stand, sit, lounge, smoke, drink, eat, or watch telly in that sagging-seat chair that had stood forever next to the window. He was out of breath by the second floor. He had to pause on the landing and breathe deeply of its urine scented air before climbing upwards. When he got to the fifth floor, he stopped again. By the seventh, his arm pits were dripping. He rubbed down his neck as he walked to the door of her flat. He never suffered a moment's doubt that she would be there. Jen Pytches would move her arse only if the building were going up in flames. And even then, she'd complain about it: "Wha' about' me programme on the telly?" He rapped on the door. From within he heard the sound of chatter, television voices that marked the time of day. Chat shows in the morning, afternoon and it was snooker God only knew why and evening brought the soaps. No answer to his knock, so he rapped again, louder this time, and he called out, "Mum?" He tried the door and found it unlocked. He opened it a crack and said, "Mum?" again. She said, "Who's it, then? That you, Paulie? You been to the job centre already, 'ave you? Don' think so, lad. Don' be trying to pull the wool over, you go' ma', son? I wasn' born this morning." She coughed the deep, phlegm-cursed cough of the forty-year smoker, as Pitchley used the tips of his fingers to move the door inward. He slipped inside and faced his mother. It was the first time he'd seen her in twenty-five years. "Well," she said. She was by the window as he thought she would be, but no longer the woman he remembered from his childhood. Twenty-five years of not stirring a muscle unless forced to do so had made his mother into a great mound of a woman wearing stretch trousers and a jumper the size of a parachute. He wouldn't have known her at all had he passed her on the street. He wouldn't have known her now had she not said, "Jim. Wha's a dolly to make of this sor' if surprise?" He said, "Hello, Mum," and he looked round the flat. Nothing had changed. Here was the same U-shaped blue sofa, there were the lamps with the misshapen shades, up on the walls were the same set of pictures: each little Pytches sitting on the knee of his or her own dad on the only occasion Jen had managed to make any of them act like fathers. God, seeing them brought it back in a rush: the risible exercise of all the kids lined up and Jen pointing to the pictures, saying, "Here's your dad, Jim. He was called Trev. But I called him my little fancy boy." And, "Yours was Derek, Bonnie. Look at the neck on that bloke, will you, dear? Couldn't put me 'ands anywhere near round his neck. Oooh. Wha' a man your dad was, Bon." And on down the line, the same recitation, given once a week lest any of them forget. "Wha' you want then, Jim?" his mother asked him. She gave a grunt as she reached for the telly's remote. She squinted at the screen, made some sort of mental note about what it was she was watching, and pushed the button to mute the sound. "I'm off," he said. "I wanted you to know." She kept her gaze level on him and said, "You been off, lad. How many years? So wha's this off that's different from that?" "Australia," he said. "New Zealand. Canada. I don't know yet. But I wanted to tell you I'm making it permanent. Cashing in everything. Starting over. I wanted you to know so you could tell the others." "Don' think they been losing sleep wondering where you wanked off to," his mother said. "I know. But all the same .. ." He wondered how much his mother knew. As far as he could recall, she didn't read a newspaper. The nation might go to hell in a wicker basket politicians on the take, the Royals stepping down, the Lords taking up weapons to fight off the Commons' plans for their demise, sports figures dying, rock stars taking overdoses of designer drugs, trains crashing, bombs exploding in Piccadilly and none of it had ever mattered, so she wouldn't know what had happened to one James Pitchford and what had been done to stop more from happening. "Old times, I suppose," he settled on saying. "You're my mum. I thought you had a right." She said, "Fetch me fags," and nodded to a table by the sofa where a packet of Benson and Hedges spilled out onto the cover of Woman's Weekly. He took them to her and she lit up, watching the screen of the television where the camera was offering a bird's eye view of a snooker table with a player bent over it studying a shot like a surgeon with a scalpel in his hand. "Old times," she repeated. "Good of you, Jim. Cheers, then." And she pushed the sound button on the remote. Pitchley shifted on his feet. He looked round for something that would do as employment. She wasn't really who he'd come to see, anyway, but he could tell that she wasn't about to part with any information on his siblings if he asked her directly. She owed him nothing and both of them knew it. One didn't spend a quarter of a century pretending that one's past had never occurred, only to come calling from the blue with the hope one's mum might decide to be helpful. He said, "Look, Mum. I'm sorry. It was the only way." She waved him off, cigarette smoke creating a filmy snake in the air. And seeing that cast him back through time, to this very room, to his mum on the floor, to the baby coming fast and her smoking one fag after another because where was the ambulance they'd rung for, God damn it, didn't they have the right to get their needs seen to? And he'd been there with her, alone when it happened, Don't leave me, Jim. Don't leave me, lad. And the thing was slimy like an uncooked cod and bloody and still attached to the cord and she smoked, she smoked all the way through it and the smoke rose into the air like a snake. Pitchley strode into the kitchen to rid himself of the memory of his ten-year-old self with a bloody newborn in his terrified hands. Three twenty-five in the morning, it had been. Brothers and sister asleep, neighbours asleep, the whole sodding world indifferent, deep in their beds, dreaming their dreams. He'd never much liked children after that. And the thought of producing one himself.. . The older he became, the more he'd realised he didn't need that drama twice in one lifetime. He went to the sink and turned on the water, thinking that a drink or a splash on his face would drive the memory out of his head. As he reached for a glass, he heard the flat door open. He heard a man's voice say, "You made a right cock up of that one, din't you? How many times I got to tell you to shut your gob when it comes to jollying the customers?" Another man said, "I din't mean no harm. Birds always like a bit of oiling, don't they? To which the first said, "Bollocks. We lost them, you yob." And then, lo, Mum. How's going wha's going?" "We got a visitor," Jen Pytches said. Pitchley drank down his water and heard the footsteps cross the small sitting room and come into the kitchen. He placed his glass into the grimy sink and turned to face his two younger brothers. They filled the room, big men like their father with watermelon heads and hands the size of dustbin lids. Pitchley felt in their presence as he'd always felt intimidated as the dickens. And he did what he'd always done at the first sight of those hulking creatures: He cursed the fate that had inspired his mother to couple with a veritable midget when she got him and to choose an all-in wrestler or so it seemed to father his brothers. "Robbie', he said as a hello to the elder one. And "Brent', to the younger. They were dressed identically in boots and blue jeans topped with bomber jackets on which the words Rolling Suds were printed front and back. They'd been working, Pitchley concluded, attempting to keep alive the mobile car-wash business that he himself had initiated when he was thirteen years old. Robbie took the lead, as always. "Well, well, well. Lookit wha' we got here, Bren, our big bro. And don't he look a real pitcher in them fancy trousers?" Brent snickered and chewed on his thumbnail and waited, as always, for direction from Rob. Pitchley said, "You win, Rob. I'm shoving off." "Shoving off like how?" Robbie went to the fridge and pulled out a can of beer which he tossed to Brent, calling out, "Ma! You want something' in there? Eat? Drink?" She said, "Cheers, Rob. Woul'n't say no to a bite o' that pork pie from yesterday. You see't there, luv? On the top shelf? Go' to eat it 'fore it goes off." "Yeah. Go' it," Rob called back. He plopped the crumbling remains of the pie onto a plate and shoved it at Brent, who disappeared for a moment as he delivered it to their mother. Rob ripped the ring-pull from his beer can and flicked it into the kitchen sink, pumping the beer directly into his mouth. He finished it in one long go and began on Brent's, which the younger man had foolishly left behind. "So," Rob said. "Shoving off, are you? And where' bouts you shoving off to, Jay?" "I'm emigrating, Rob. I don't know where. It doesn't matter." "Matters to me." Of course, Pitchley thought. For where else would the money come from when he placed a bad bet, when he crashed another car, when he fancied a holiday by the sea? Without Pitchley there to write out the cheques when Robbie had a financial itch that wanted scratching, life as he'd known it was going to be different. He'd actually have to make a proper go of Rolling Suds, and if the business failed as it had been threatening to do for years under Rob's quixotic management then there would be no fallback position. Well, that was life, Rob, Pitchley thought. The milk cow's dried up, the golden egg's broken, the rainbow's vanishing permanently. You might Ve tracked me from East London to Hammersmith to Kensington to Hamp-stead and all points in between when you fancied, but you are going to be hard pressed to track me across the sea. He said again, "I don't know where I'll end up. Not yet." "So wha's the point in all this, then?" Robbie indicated Pitchley and his presence in their shabby childhood flat by raising the empty can to him. "Can't be oP times now, can it, Jay? OP times's the least of what you'd want to come round to have a chat about, I 'xpect. You'd like to forget them, you would, Jay. But here's the ringer. Some of us can't. We don't got the wherewithal. So everything we been through stays right up 'ere, circling round and round." He used the can again, but this time to indicate the alleged movement in his head. Then he shoved both the cans into the plastic grocery bag that hung from the handle of one of the kitchen drawers and had long done service as the family dust bin. "I know," Pitchley said. "You know, you know," his brother mocked. "You don't know nowt, Jay, and don't you forget it." Pitchley said for the thousandth time to his brother, "I didn't ask you to take them on. What you did ' "Oh no. You din't ask. You just said, "You saw what they wrote 'bout me, Rob!" Tha's what you said. "They're gonna end up pulling me limb to limb," you said. "I'm gonna be nothing when this is over." "I may have said that but what I meant was ' "Bugger what you meant!" Robbie kicked a cupboard door. Pitchley flinched. "Wha's this, then?" Brent had returned, having pinched their mother's packet of Benson and Hedges. He was lighting up. "This yob's doing another runner and claims he don't know where he's going. How'd you like that?" Brent blinked. Tha's shit, Jay." "Bloody right that's shit." Rob jabbed his finger into Pitchley's face. "I did time for you. I did six months. You know wha' it's like inside? Lemme tell you." And the catalogue began, the same dreary recitation that Pitchley had heard every time his brother wanted more money. It started with the reason for Robbie's run-in with the law: beating up the journalist who'd unearthed Jimmy Pytches from the carefully constructed past of James Pitchford, who'd not only printed the story pulled from a snout at the Tower Hamlets station but had the audacity to follow it up with another despite being warned off by Rob, who stood to gain nothing' sod all, Jay, you hear me?-' for taking up arms to protect the reputation of a brother who'd deserted them years ago. "Us lot never came near to you till you needed us, Jay, and then you bled us dry," Robbie said. His capacity for rewriting history was amazing, Pitchley thought. He said, "You came near me back then because you saw my picture in the paper, Rob. You saw a chance to put me in your debt. Bash a few heads. Break a few bones. All in the cause of keeping Jimmy's past hidden. He'll like that, he will. He's 'shamed of us. An' if we keep him thinkin' we're 'bout to pop out of his cupboard at any time, he'll pay, stupid git. He'll pay and he'll pay." "I sat in a cell," Robbie roared. "I shat in a bucket. You go' that, mate? I go' done over in the shower, Jay. And wha'd you get?" "You!" Pitchley cried. "You and Brent. That's what I got. The two of you breathing down my neck ever since, hands out for the dosh, regular as rain in the winter." "Can't wash cars in the rain, can we, Jay?" Brent offered. "Shut up!" Rob threw the rubbish sack at Brent. "Blood and guts, you're so fucking stupid." "He said ' "Shut up! I heard wha' he said. Don' you know what he meant? He meant we're leeches. Tha's what he's saying. Like we owe him and not the reverse." "I'm not saying that." Pitchley reached in his pocket. He brought out his chequebook, where inside was the incomplete cheque he'd been writing when the cop had shown up at his house. "But I am saying that it's ending now because I'm leaving, Rob. I'll write this last cheque and after that you're on your own." "Fuck that shit!" Rob advanced on him. Brent took a hasty step back towards the sitting room. Jen Pytches called, "Wha's goin' on, you lot?" "Rob and Jay ' "Shut up! Shut up! Christ on the cross! Why're you such a bleeding git, Brent?" Pitchley took out a biro. He clicked out the ink. But before he could put pen to paper, Rob was on him. He ripped the chequebook from Pitchley's hand and threw it against the wall where it hit a rack of mugs which crashed to the floor. "Hey!" Jen shouted. Pitchley saw his life flash before him. Brent dived into the sitting room. "Bloody stupid wanker," Rob hissed. His hands went for the lapels of Pitchley's jacket. He jerked Pitchley forward. His head snapped back. "You don't understand fuck all, you git. You never did." Pitchley closed his eyes and waited for the blow, but it didn't come. Instead, his brother released him as savagely as he'd taken hold of him, shoving him backwards against the kitchen sink. "I din't do nowt wanting your stupid money," Rob said. "You handed it over, yeah, right. An' I was glad to take it, yeah. But you're the one what go' out the chequebook every time you saw my mug. "Give the bloody git a thousand or two and he'll disappear." Tha's wha' you thought. And then you blamed me for takin' the hand out when the hand out was nothing but guilt money in the first place." "I didn't do anything to feel guilty ' Rob's hand chopped the air, silencing Pitchley. "You pr' tended we didn't exist, Jay. So don't blame me for wha' you did." Pitchley swallowed. There was nothing more to say. There was too much truth in Robbie's claim and too much falsehood in his own past. From the sitting room, the sound of the television rose, Jen raising the volume to drown out whatever her oldest two sons were doing in the kitchen. None of my business, her action said. Right, Pitchley thought. All of their lives had been none of her business. He said, "I'm sorry. It was the only way I knew to make a life, Rob." Rob turned away. He went back to the fridge. He brought out another beer and opened it. He raised it to Pitchley in a mocking, farewell salute. He said, "I only ever wanted to be your brother, Jim." Gideon 2 NOVEMBER It seems to me that the truth about James Pitch ford and Katja Wolfflies between what Sarah-Jane said about James's indifference to women and what Dad said about James's besotted ness with Katja. Both of them had reason to twist the facts. If Sarah-Jane had disliked Katja and wanted James for herself, she'd not be likely to admit it if the Lodger had shown a preference elsewhere. And as for Dad .. . If he was responsible for Katja's pregnancy, he'd hardly be likely to confess that to me, would he? Fathers tend not to reveal that sort of thing to their sons. You listen to me with that expression of calm tranquillity on your face, and because that expression is so calm so tranquil so un judging so open to receive whatever it is that I choose to maunder on about, I can see what you're thinking, Dr. Rose: He's clinging to the fact of Katja Wolffs pregnancy, as the only means currently available to him to avoid .. . What, Dr. Rose? And what if I'm not avoiding anything? That could be the case precisely, Gideon. But consider that you've come up with no memory relating to your music in quite some time. You've offered very few memories of your mother. Your grandfather in your childhood has all but been deleted from your brain, as has your grandmother. And Raphael Robson as he was in your childhood has barely warranted a passing mention. I can't help the way my brain is connecting the dots, can I? Of course not. But in order to stimulate associative thoughts, one needs to be in a mental position in which the mind is free to roam. That's the point of becoming quiet, becoming restful, choosing a place to write and writing undisturbed. Actively pursuing the death of your sister and the subsequent trial How can I go on to something else when my mind is filled with this? I can't just clear my brain, forget about it, and pursue something else. She was murdered, Dr. Rose. I'd forgotten she was murdered. God forgive me, but I'd even forgotten she existed. I can't just set that to one side. I can't simply jot down details about playing ansiosamente as a nine year old when I was meant to play animate, and I can't dwell upon the psychological significance of misinterpreting a piece of music like that. But what about the blue door, Gideon? you inquire, still reason incarnate. Considering the part that that door has played in your mental process, would it help if you reflected upon it and wrote about it rather than what you've been told by others? No, Dr. Rose. That door if you will pardon the pun is closed. Still, why not shut your eyes for a few moments and visualise that door again? you recommend. Why not see if you can put it into a context quite apart from Wigmore Hall? As you describe it, it appears to be an exterior door to a house or a flat. Could it be possible that it has nothing to do with Wigmore Hall? Perhaps it's the colour that you might think and write about for a time and not the door itself. Perhaps it's the presence of two locks instead of one. Perhaps it's the lighting fixture above it and the entire idea of what light is used for. Freud, Jung, and whoever else occupy the consulting room with MS ... And yes, yes, yes, Dr. Rose. I am a field ready for the harvest. 3 NOVEMBER Libby's come home. She was gone for three days after our altercation in the square. I heard nothing from her during that time, and the silence from her flat was an accusation, asserting that I'd driven her away through cowardice and monomania. The silence claimed that my monomania was merely a useful shield behind which I could hide so that I didn't have to face my failure with Libby herself, my failure to connect with a human being who had been dropped into my lap by the Almighty for the sole purpose of allowing me to form an attachment to her. Here she is, Gideon, the Fates or God or Karma had said to me on that day when I agreed to let the basement flat to the curly-haired courier who needed a refuge from her husband. Here's your opportunity to resolve what has plagued you since Beth left your life. But I had allowed that singular chance for redemption to slip through my fingers. More than that, I had done everything in my power to avoid having that chance in the first place. For what better way to circumvent intimate involvement with a woman than to subvert my career, thereby giving myself an exigent focal point for all my endeavours? No time to talk about our situation, Libby darling. No time to consider the oddity of it. No time to consider why I can hold your naked body, feel your soft breasts against my chest, feel the mound of your pubis pressing against me, and experience nothing but the raging humiliation of experiencing nothing. Indeed, there is no time for anything at all but resolving this plaguing persistent pernicious question regarding my music, Libby. Or is the consideration of Libby right now a blind that helps cloud whatever it is that the blue door represents? And how the hell am I to know? When Libby returned to Chalcot Square, she didn't bang on my door or phone me. Nor did she announce her presence through the means of either the Suzuki's engine gunning explosively outside or pop music blaring from her flat. The only way I knew that she was back at all was from the sudden sound of the old pipes clanging from within the walls of the building. She was having a bath. I gave her forty minutes' leeway once the pipes were silent. Then I went downstairs, outside, and down the steps to her front door. I hesitated before knocking, almost giving up the idea of trying to mend my fences with her. But at the last moment when I thought, To hell with it, which I realise was my way of turning tail and running away, I found that I didn't want to be at odds with Libby. If nothing else, she'd been such a friend. I missed that friendship, and I wanted to make sure I still had it. Several knocks were required to get a response. Even when she did answer, she asked, "Who is it?" from behind the closed door although she knew very well that I was the only person likely to be calling on her in Chalcot Square. I was patient with this. She's upset with me, I told myself. And, all things considered, that's her right. When she opened the door, I said the conventional thing to her. "Hullo. I was worried about you. When you disappeared .. ." "Don't lie," was her reply, although she didn't say it unkindly. She'd had time to dress, and she was wearing something other than her usual garb: a colourful skirt that dangled to her calves, a black sweater that reached her hips. Her feet were bare, although she had a gold chain round her ankle. She looked quite nice. "It's not a lie. When you left, I thought you'd gone to work. When you didn't come back ... "I didn't know what to think." "Another lie," she said. I persisted, telling myself, The fault is mine. I'll take the punishment. "May I come in?" She stepped back from the door in a movement that was not unlike a complete body shrug. I walked into the flat and saw that she'd been assembling a meal for herself. She had it laid out on the coffee table in front of the futon that serves as her sofa, and it was completely unlike her usual fare of take-away Chinese or curry: a grilled chicken breast, broccoli, and a salad of lettuce and tomatoes. I said, "You're eating. Sorry. Shall I come back later?" and I hated the formality that I heard in my voice. She said, "No problem as long as you don't mind if I eat in front of you." "I don't mind. Do you mind being watched while you eat?" "I don't mind." It was a conversational check and counter check. There were so many things that she and I could talk about and so many things that we were avoiding. I said, "I'm sorry about the other day. About what happened. Between us, that is. I'm going through a bad patch just now. Well, obviously, you know that already. But until I see it through, I'm not going to be right for anyone." "Were you before, Gideon?" I was confused. "Was I what?" "Right for anyone." She went back to the sofa, tucking her skirt beneath her as she sat, an oddly feminine movement that seemed completely out of character. "I don't know how to answer that honestly and be honest with myself," I said. "I'm supposed to say Yes, I was right in the past and I'll be right again. But the truth of the matter is that I might not have been. Right, that is. I might not ever have been right for anyone, and I might never be. And that's all I know just now." She was drinking water, I saw, not Coke as had been her preference since I had known her. She had a glass with a slice of lemon floating amidst the ice cubes, and she took this up as I was speaking and she watched me over the rim as she drank. "Fair enough," she said. "Is that what you've come to tell me?" "Aslsaid,lwasworriedaboutyou. Wedidn'tpartongoodterms.And when you left and didn't return .. . I suppose I thought you might have .. . Well, I'm glad you're back. And well. I'm glad you're well." "Why?" she asked. "What did you think I might have done? Jumped into the river or something?" "Of course not." "Then?" I didn't see at the moment that this was the wrong road to be travelling down. Idiotically, I turned into it, assuming it would take us to the destination that I had in mind. I said, "I know your position in London is tenuous, Libby. So I wouldn't blame you for .. . well, for doing whatever you felt you needed to do to shore it up. Especially since you and I parted badly. But I'm glad you're back. I'm awfully glad. I've missed having you here to talk to." "Gotcha," she said with a wink, although she didn't smile. "I get it, Gid." "What?" She took up her knife and fork and cut into the chicken. Despite the fact that she'd been in England for several years at this point, I noted that she still ate like an American, with that inefficient shifting about of the knife and the fork from one hand to the other. I was dwelling on this fact when she answered me. "You think I've been with Rock, don't you?" "I hadn't really .. . well, you do work for him. And after you and I had that row.. . I know that it would be only natural to .. ."I wasn't sure how to complete the thought. She was chewing her chicken slowly, and she was watching me flailing round verbally, perhaps determined not to do a single thing to help me. She finally spoke. "What you thought was that I was back with Rock, doing what Rock wants me to do. Fucking him, basically, whenever he wants it. And totally putting up with him fucking everyone else he comes across. Right?" "I know he holds the whip hand, Libby, but since you've been gone, I've been thinking that if you consult a solicitor who specialises in immigration law ' "Bullshit what you've been thinking," she scoffed. "Listen. If your husband is continuing to threaten you with going to the Home Office, we can ' "It is what you think, isn't it?" She set down her fork. "I wasn't with Rock Peters, Gideon. Sure. It's hard for you to believe. I mean, why wouldn't I go running back to some complete asshole, since that's, like, my basic m.o. In fact, why wouldn't I move right in with him and put up with his shit all over again? I've been doing such a totally good job of putting up with yours." "You're still angry, then." I sighed, frustrated with my inability to communicate with anyone, it seemed. I wanted to get us past this, but I didn't know where I wanted to get us to. I couldn't offer Libby what she had blatantly wanted from me for months, and I didn't actually know what else I could offer her that would satisfy, not only at that moment but in the future. But I wanted to offer her something. "Libby, I'm not right," I said. "You've seen that. You know it. We've not talked about the worst of what's wrong with me, but you know because you've experienced .. . You've seen .. . You've been with me ... at night." God, it was excruciating trying to say it outright. I hadn't taken a seat when she herself had, so I paced across the sitting room to the kitchen and back again. I was waiting for her to rescue me. Have others done that before? you enquire. Done .. . what? Rescued you, Gideon. Because, you see, often we wait for what we're used to from people. We develop the expectation that one person will give us what we've traditionally received from others. God knows there have been few enough others, Dr. Rose. There was Beth, of course. But she reacted with wounded silence, which is certainly not what I wanted from Libby. And from Libby, what was it that you wanted? Understanding, I suppose. An acceptance that would make further conversation and a fuller admission unnecessary. But what I got was a statement that told me clearly she was going to give me none of that. She said, "Life isn't all about you, Gideon." I said, "I'm not implying that it is." She said, "Sure you are. I'm gone for three days and you assume that I've totally freaked because we can't get something going between us. You figure that I've run back to Rock and he and I are bumping woo lies all because of you." "I wouldn't say that you were having relations with him because of me. But you have to admit that you wouldn't have gone to him in the first place if we hadn't.. . if things had gone differently for us. For you and me." "Geez. You are, like, deaf as a stone, aren't you? Have you even been listening to me? But then, why would you when we're not discussing you." "That's not fair. And I have been listening." "Yeah? Well, I said I wasn't with Rock. I saw him, sure. I went to work every day so I saw him. And I could've gotten back with him if I wanted but I didn't want. And if he wants to phone the Feds or whoever it is that you guys phone then he's going to do it and that'll be it: a one way ticket to San Francisco. And there is, like, absolutely zilch that I can do about it. And that's the story." "There's got to be a compromise. If he wants you as he seems to want you, perhaps you can get some counselling that would enable you to' ' "Are you out of your mind? Or are you just freaked out that I might start wanting something from you?" "I'm only trying to suggest a solution to the immigration problem. You don't want to be deported. I don't want you to be deported. Clearly, Rock doesn't want you to be deported because if he did, be would have done something to alert the authorities it's the Home Office, by the way and they would have already come for you." She had cut into her chicken again and she had lifted a forkful of meat to her mouth. But she hadn't taken it. Instead, she held the fork suspended while I spoke and when I had finished, she laid the fork back onto her plate and stared at me for a good fifteen seconds before saying anything. And then what she said made no sense at all, "Tap dancing," were her words. I said, "What?" "Tap dancing, Gideon. That's where I went when I left here. That's what I do. I tap dance. I'm not very good but it doesn't matter because I don't, like, do it to be good. I do it because I get hot and sweaty and I have fun and I like the way it makes me feel when I'm done." I said, "Yes. I see," although I didn't, actually. We were talking about her marriage, we were talking about her status in the UK, we were talking about our own difficulties at least we were trying to -and what tap dancing had to do with all this was unclear to me. "There's this very nice chick at my tap dancing class, an Indian girl who's taking the class on the sly. She invited me home to meet her family. And that's where I've been. With her. With them. I wasn't with Rock. Didn't even think of going to Rock. What I thought was what would be best for me. And that's what I did, Gid. Just like that." "Yes. Well. I see." I was a broken record. I could sense her anger, but I didn't know what to do with it. "No. You don't see. Everyone in your itty bitty world lives and dies and breathes for you, and that's the way it's always been. So you figure that what's going on with me is the exact same deal. You can't get it up when we're together and I'm just so totally bummed about it that I rush off to the biggest dickhead in London and do the nasty with him because of you. You think I'm saying Gid doesn't want me, but good old Rock does, and if some total asshole wants me that makes me okay, that makes me real, that makes me really exist." "Libby, I'm not saying any of that." "You don't have to. It's the way you live, so it's the way you think everyone else lives, too. Only in your world, you live for that stupid violin instead of for another person and if the violin rejects you or something, you don't know who you are any more. And that's what's going on, Gideon. But my life is, like, totally not about you. And yours isn't about your violin." I stood there wondering how we'd reached this point. I couldn't think of a clear response. And in my head all I could hear was Dad saying, This is what comes of knowing Americans, and of all Americans, the worst are Californians. They don't converse. They psycho-logise. I said, "I'm a musician, Libby." "No. You're a person. Like I'm a person." "People don't exist outside what they do." "Course they do. Most people exist just fine. It's only people who don't have any real insides people who've never taken the time to find out who they really are that fall to pieces when stuff doesn't turn out the way they want it to." "You can't know how this .. . this situation .. . between us is going to turn out. I've said that I'm in the middle of a bad patch, but I'm coming through it. I'm working at coming through it every day." "You are so not listening to me." She threw down her fork. She'd not eaten half of her meal, but she carried her plate over to the kitchen, dumped the chicken and broccoli into a plastic bag, and flung that bag into the fridge. "You don't have anything to turn to if your music goes bad. And you think I don't have anything to turn to if you and me or Rock and me or me and anything goes bad either. But I'm not you. I have a life. You're the person who doesn't." "Which is why I'm trying to get my life back. Because until I do, I won't be good for myself or for anyone." "Wrong. No. You never had a life. All you had was the violin. Playing the violin wasn't ever who you are. But you made it who you are and that's why you're nothing right now." Gibberish, I could hear Dad scoffing. Another month in this charming creature's company and what's left of your mind will turn to porridge. This is what comes of a steady diet of McDonald's, television chat shows, and self-help books. If, of course, the dear thing can read, which is a supposition that's still left open to serious doubt, Gideon. With Dad in my head and Libby in front of me, I didn't stand a chance. The only course that seemed open to me was a dignified exit, which I attempted to make, saying, "I think we've said all we need to on the subject. It's safe to say that this is just going to be one area in which we disagree." "Well, let's make sure we only say what's safe," was Libby's retort. "Cause if things get, like, too scary for us, we might actually be able to change." I was at the door, but this parting shot of hers was going so far wide of the mark that I had to correct her. I said, "Some people don't need to change, Libby. They might need to understand what's happening to them, but they don't need to change." Before she could answer, I left her. It seemed crucial that I have the last word. Still, as I closed the door behind me and I did it carefully so as not to betray anything that she might take as an adverse reaction to our conversation I heard her say, "Yeah. Right, Gideon," and something scraped viciously across the wooden floor, as if she'd kicked the coffee table. 4 NOVEMBER I am the music. I am the instrument. She sees fault in this. I do not. What I see is the difference between us, that difference which Dad has been attempting to point out from the moment he and Libby met. Libby has never been a professional, and she's not an artist. It's easy for her to say that I am not the violin because she has never known what it is to have a life that is inextricably entwined with an artistic performance. Through out her life, she's had a series of jobs, work that she's gone to and then left at the end of the day. Artists do not live that sort of life. Assuming that they do or can displays an ignorance which must give one pause to consider. To consider what? you want to know. To consider the possibilities. For Libby and me. Because there for a time, I had thought .. . Yes. There seemed to be a rightness in our knowing each other. There seemed to be a distinct advantage in the fact that Libby didn't know who I was, didn't recognise my name when she saw it that day on her courier parcel, didn't appreciate the facts of my career, didn't care whether I played the violin or made kites and sold them in Camden Market. I liked that about her. But now I see that being with someone who understands my life is crucial if I am going to live my life. And that need for understanding was what prompted me to seek out Katie Waddington, the girl from the convent that I remembered sitting in the kitchen in Kensington Square, Katja Wolff's most frequent visitor. Katja Wolffwas one half of the two KWs, Katie informed me when I tracked her down. Sometimes, she said, when one has a close friendship, one makes the mistake of assuming it will be there forever, unchanging and nurturing. But it rarely is. It was no big problem to locate Katie Waddington. Nor was it any big surprise to discover that she'd followed a life course similar to what she'd suggested would be her mission two decades earlier. I located her by means of the telephone directory, and I found her in her clinic in Maida Vale. It's called Harmony of Bodies and Minds, this clinic, and it's a name which I suppose is useful to disguise its main function: sex therapy. They don't come right out and call it sex therapy because who would have the nerve to engage in it if that were the case? Instead, they call it 'relationship therapy', and an inability to take part in the sexual act itself is called 'relationship dysfunction'. "You'd be astonished to know how many people have problems with sex," Katie informed me in a fashion that sounded personally friendly and professionally reassuring. "We get at least three referrals every day. Some are due to medical problems: diabetes, heart conditions, post operative trauma. That sort of thing. But for every client with a medical problem, there are nine or ten with psychological troubles. I suppose that's not surprising, really, given our national obsession with sex and the pretence we maintain that sex isn't our national obsession. One only has to look at the tabloids and the glossies to know the level of interest everyone has in sex. I'm surprised not to find more people in therapy struggling with all this. God knows I've never encountered anyone without some sort of issue with sex. The healthy ones are those who deal with it." She took me down a corridor painted in warm, earthy colours, and we went to her office, which opened onto a terrace where a profusion of pot plants provided a verdant backdrop for a comfortable room of overstuffed furniture, large cushions, and a collection of pottery ("South American', she informed me) and baskets ("North American .. . lovely, aren't they? They're my guilty pleasure. I can't afford them but I buy them anyway. I suppose there are worse vices in life."). We sat and took stock of each other. Katie said in that same warm, personally friendly and professionally reassuring voice, "Now. How can I help you, Gideon?" I realised that she thought I'd come to solicit her skills, and I hastened to disabuse her of the notion. Nothing in her area of speciality was required, I told her heartily. I'd really come for some information about Katja Wolff, if she didn't mind. I would recompense her for her time since I'd be using up what would otherwise be someone's appointment. But as to having .. . shall we say difficulties of the sort she was used to dealing with .. . ? Har, bar. Chuckle. Well, at the moment there was no need for that sort of intervention. Katie said, "Brilliant. So glad to hear it," and she settled more comfortably into her armchair. This was high backed and upholstered in autumn colours similar to those which decorated the waiting room and the corridor. It was also extremely sturdy, a quality that would be necessary considering Katie's size. For if she'd had a tendency to fat as a twenty something university student sitting in the kitchen in Kensington Square, now she was downright obese, of a size that would no longer fit into a seat at the cinema or on a plane. But she was still dressed in hues that flattered her colouring, and the jewellery she wore was tasteful and looked expensive. Nonetheless, it was difficult for me to imagine how she managed to get around. And, admittedly, I couldn't picture anyone telling their innermost libidinous secrets to her. It was obvious others hadn't shared my aversion, however. The clinic looked like a thriving enterprise, and I'd managed to get in to see Katie only because a regular client had cancelled minutes before I phoned. I told her that I was trying to refresh some memories of my childhood, and I'd remembered her. I'd recalled that she'd often been in the kitchen when Katja Wolff was feeding Sonia, and as I had no idea of Katja's whereabouts, it seemed to me that she Katie might be able to fill in the gaps where my memories were dim. Thankfully, she didn't ask why I'd developed this sudden interest in the past. Nor did she, from her place of professional wisdom, comment upon what it might mean that I had gaps in my recollections in the first place. Instead, she said, "People at Immaculate Conception used to call us the two KWs. "Where are the KWs?" they'd ask. "Someone fetch the KWs to have a look at this." "So you were close friends." "I wasn't the only one who sought her out when she first accepted a room at the convent," she explained. "But our friendship .. . I suppose it took. So yes, we were close at the time." There was a low table next to her chair, and on it stood an elaborate bird cage with two budgerigars inside, one a brilliant blue and the other green. As Katie spoke, she unfastened the door of the cage, and took the blue bird out, grasping him in her large fat fist. He squawked in protest and took a nip at her fingers. She said, "Naughty, naughty, joey," and picked up a tongue depressor that lay on the table next to the cage. For a grim moment I thought she meant to use it to swat the little bird. But instead she used it to massage his head and neck in a way that calmed him. Indeed, it appeared to hypnotise him, and it did much the same for me, since I watched in fascination as the bird's eyes eased shut. Katie opened her palm, and he sank into it contentedly. "Therapeutic," Katie told me as she went on with the massage, using the tips of her fingers once the bird was gentled. "Lowers the blood pressure." "I didn't know that birds had high blood pressure." She laughed quietly. "Not Joey's. Mine. I've morbid obesity, to state the obvious. Doctor says I'll die before I'm fifty if I don't she'd sixteen stone. "You weren't born fat," he tells me. "No, but I've lived it," I tell him. It's hell on one's heart, and what it does to one's blood pressure doesn't bear mentioning. But we all have to go some way. I'm just choosing mine." She ran her fingers along Joey's folded right wing. In response eyes still closed he stretched it out. "That's what attracted me to Katja. She was someone who made choices, and I loved that about her. Probably because in my own family everyone just went into the restaurant business without thinking there might be something else out there to do with their lives. But Katja was someone who grabbed at life. She didn't just accept what was thrust upon her." "East Germany," I acknowledged. "The balloon escape." "Yes. That's an excellent example. The balloon escape and how she engineered it." "Except she wasn't the one who built the balloon, was she? Not from what I've been told." "No, she didn't build it. That's not what I meant by engineered. I meant how she convinced Hannes Hertel to take her with him. How she blackmailed him, actually, if what she told me was true, and I expect it was because why would someone lie about something so unflattering? But nasty as her plan might have been, she had real nerve to go to him and to make the threat. He was a big man six foot three or four to hear her tell it and he could have done her serious harm had he a mind to do so. He could have killed her, I expect, and gone on his way over the wall and disappeared from there. It was a calculated risk on her part, and she took it. That's how much she wanted life." "What sort of risk?" "The threat, you mean?" Katie had gone on to Joey's other wing, which he'd stretched out as cooperatively as he had done the first. Inside the cage, the second budgerigar had skittered along one of the perches and was watching the massage session with one bright eye. "She threatened to alert the authorities if Hannes didn't take her with him." "That's not a story that's ever come out, is it?" "I expect I'm the only person she ever told, and she probably didn't realise. We'd both been drinking, and when Katja got pissed which wasn't often, mind you she'd say or do things that she couldn't even remember twenty-four hours later. I never mentioned the Hannes situation to her after she told me about it, but I admired her for it because it spoke of the lengths she was willing to go to. And as I had to go to my own lengths' She indicated the office and the clinic itself, so many steps removed from her family's restaurant business 'it made us sisters, after a fashion." "You lived at the convent as well?" "God no. Katja did. She worked for the sisters in their kitchen, I think in exchange for her room while she was learning English. But I lived behind the convent. There were lodgings for students at the bottom of the grounds. Right on the District line, so the noise was ghastly. But the rent was cheap, and the location near to so many colleges made it convenient. Several hundred students lived there then, and most of us knew of Katja." Here she smiled. "Had we not known of her, we would have taken notice of her eventually. What she could do with a jumper, three scarves, and a pair of trousers was quite remarkable. She had an innovative mind when it came to fashion. That's what she wanted to do, by the way. And she would have done, had things not turned out so badly for her." This was exactly where I wanted the conversation to head. "She wasn't really qualified to be my sister's nanny, was she?" I asked. Katie was stroking the budgerigar's tail feathers now. "She was devoted to your sister," Katie said. "She loved her. She was brilliant with her. I never saw her be anything other than absolutely tender and gentle towards Sonia. She was a godsend, Gideon." That wasn't what I expected to hear, and I closed my eyes, trying to find a picture in my mind of Katja and Sonia together. I wanted a picture that squared with what I'd said to the ginger-haired policeman, not one that squared with what Katie was claiming. I said, "You would have seen them together mostly in the kitchen, though, when she was feeding Sonia," and I kept my eyes closed, trying to conjure that picture at least: the old red and black lino squares on the floor, the table scarred with the semi-circles of cups placed down on unprotected wood, the two windows set below the level of the street and the bars that fronted them. Odd that I could remember the sight of feet passing by on the pavement above those kitchen windows, but I could not at that moment envisage a scene in which something might have happened that would confirm what I'd later reported to the police. Katie said, "I did see them in the kitchen. But I saw them at the convent as well. And in the square. And elsewhere. Part ofKatja's job was to stimulate her senses and Here she cut herself off, stopped stroking the bird, and said, "But you already know all this, I suppose." I murmured vaguely, "As I said, my memory .. . ?" That seemed to be enough because she went on. "Ah. Yes. Right. Well, all children, disabled or not, benefit from sensory stimulation, and Katja saw to it that Sonia had a variety of experiences. She worked with her in developing motor skills and she saw to it that she was exposed to the environment beyond the home. She was limited by your sister's health, but when Sonia was able to cope with it, Katja would take her out and about. And if I was free, I went as well. So I saw her with Sonia, not every day but several times a week, for the entire time your sister was .. . well, alive. And Katja was very good to Sonia. So when everything happened as it happened .. . Well, I still find it a bit difficult to understand." So thoroughly different was this account to anything I'd heard or read in the papers that I felt compelled to attempt a frontal assault. "This doesn't square at all with what I've been told." "By whom?" "By Sarah-Jane Beckett for one." "That doesn't surprise me," Katie said. "You can take everything Sarah-Jane says with a pinch of salt. They were oil and water, Katja and she. And there was James to consider. He was wild about Katja, completely over the moon every time she so much as looked his way. Sarah-Jane didn't much like that. It was only too obvious that she'd earmarked James for herself." This was down-the-rabbit-hole stuff, Dr. Rose, this bit about James the Lodger. No matter where, how, or to whom I turned, the story seemed to turn as well. And it turned in subtle ways, just a variation here and a little twist there but enough to throw me off my stride and make me wonder in whose words I could believe. Perhaps in no one's, you point out to me. Each person sees things in his own way, Gideon. Each person develops a version of past events that he can live with, and put to the rack, that's the version that he tells. Ultimately, it becomes his truth. But what is Katie Waddington trying to live with, twenty years after the crime? I can understand what Dad is trying to live with, what Sarah-Jane Beckett is trying to live with. But Katie .. . ? She wasn't a member of the household. She had no interest in anything other than her friendship with Katja Wolff. Right? Yet it had been Katie Waddington's evidence that as much as anything, had sealed Katja Wolff s fate. I'd read that in the newspaper cutting where the words Nanny Lied to Police had formed a mammoth headline. In her only statement to the investigators Katja had claimed that a phone call from Katie Waddington had taken her from the bathroom for no more than a minute on the night Sonia drowned. But Katie Waddington had, under oath, sworn that she was at an evening class at the same moment that that phone call had ostensibly been made. Her testimony had been supported by the records of the class instructor. And a serious blow had been dealt to Katfa's nearly nonexistent defence. But wait. God. Had Katie too wanted James the Lodger? I wondered. Had she orchestrated events somehow in order to make James Pitchford available to her? As if she perceived the subject festering in my mind, Katie continued with the theme she'd begun, "Katja wasn't interested in James. She saw him as someone who could help her with her English, and I suppose she used him, if it comes down to it. She saw that he wanted her to spend her free time with him, and she was happy to do it, so long as that free time was spent in language tutorials. James went along with that. I suppose he hoped she'd fall in love with him eventually if he was good enough to her." "So he could have been the man who made her pregnant." "As payment for the language lessons, d'you mean? I doubt it. Sex in exchange for anything wouldn't have been Katja's style. After all, she could have had sex with Hannes Hertel to get him to take her in the hot air balloon. But she chose a different route entirely, and one that could have got her badly hurt." Katie had ceased petting the blue budgerigar, and she watched the bird as he slowly regained his senses. His tail feathers returned to normal first, then his wings, and finally his eyes, which opened. He blinked as if wondering where he was. I said, "Then she was in love with someone other than James. You must know who." "I don't know that she was in love with anyone." "But if she was pregnant ' "Don't be naive, Gideon. A woman doesn't need to be in love to become pregnant. She doesn't even need to be willing." She returned the blue bird to the cage. "Are you suggesting.. ." I couldn't even say it, so horrified was I at the thought of what could have happened and at whose hands. "No, no," Katie said hastily. "She wasn't raped. She would have told me. I do believe that. What I meant was that.. ." A marked hesitation during which Katie took the green bird from the cage and began to give it the same massage as she'd given the other. "As I said, she drank a bit. Not a lot and not often. But when she did.. . well, I'm afraid she forgot things. So there was every chance that she herself didn't know .. . That's the only explanation I've ever been able to come up with." "Explanation for what?" "For the fact that I didn't know she was pregnant," Katie said. "We told each other everything. And the fact that she never told me she was pregnant suggests to me that she didn't know herself. Unless she wanted to keep the identity of the father a secret, I suppose." I didn't want to head in that direction, and I didn't want her to do so. I said, "If she drank on her evenings off and one time ended up with someone she didn't even know, she might not have wanted that to come out. It would only have made her look worse, wouldn't it? Especially when she went to trial. Because they talked about her character at the trial, as I understand." Or at least, I thought, Sarah-Jane Beckett had done. "As to that," Katie said, ceasing her stroking of the green bird's head for a moment, "I wanted to be a character witness. Despite her lie about the telephone call, I thought I could do that much for her. But I wasn't allowed to. Her barrister wouldn't call me. And when the Crown Prosecutor discovered that I hadn't even known she was pregnant .. . You can imagine what he made of that when he was questioning me: How could I declare myself Katja Wolff's closest friend and an authority on what she was and wasn't capable of doing if she'd never trusted me enough to reveal she was pregnant?" "I see how it went." "Where it went was murder. I thought I could help her. I wanted to help her. But when she asked me to lie about that phone call ' "She asked you to lief "Yes. She asked me. But I just couldn't do it. Not in court. Not under oath. Not for anyone. That's where I had to draw the line, and it ended our friendship." She lowered her gaze to the bird in her palm, its right wing extended now to receive the touch that the other bird had been given. Intelligent little creature, I thought. She'd not yet mesmerised it with her caress, but the bird was already cooperating. "It's odd, isn't it?" she said to me. "One can earnestly believe one has a particular type of relationship with another person, only to discover it was never what one thought in the first place." "Yes," I said. "It's very odd." Chapter Nineteen Yasmin Edwards stood at the corner of Oakhill and Galveston Roads with the number fifty-five burning into her brain. She didn't want any part of what she was doing, but she was doing it anyway, compelled by a force that seemed at once outside herself and integral to her being. Her heart was saying Go home, girl. Get away from this place. Go back to the shop and go back to pretending. Her head was saying Nope, time to know the worst. And the rest of her body was heaving between her head and her heart, leaving her feeling like a thick blonde heroine from a thriller film, the sort who tiptoes through the dark towards that creaking door while the audience shouts at her to stay away. She'd stopped at the laundry before leaving Kennington. When she'd not been able to cope any longer with what her mind had been insisting for the past several days, she'd shut up the shop and picked up the Fiesta from the car park on the estate with the intention of heading to Wandsworth straight off. But at the top of Braganza Street, where she had to wait for the traffic to clear before she could turn into Kennington Park Road, she'd caught a glimpse of the laundry tucked between the grocery and the electrical shop, and she'd decided to pop round and ask Katja what she wanted for dinner. No matter that she knew in her heart this was just an excuse to check up on her lover. She hadn' tasked Katja about dinner before they'd parted that morning, had she? The unexpected visit from that bloody detective had rattled them away from their regular routine. So she found a spot to park and she ducked into the shop, where she saw to her relief that Katja was at work: in the back, bending over a steaming iron that she was gliding along someone's lace-edged sheets. The combination of heat, humidity, and a smelly jungle of unwashed laundry made the shop feel like the tropics. Within ten seconds of entering the place, Yasmin felt dizzy, sweat beading on her forehead. She'd never met Mrs. Crushley, but she recognised the laundry owner from the attitude she projected from her sewing machine when Yasmin approached the counter. She was of the England-fought-the-war-for-the-likes-of-you generation, a woman too young to have done service during any conflict in recent history but just old enough to remember a London that was largely Anglo-Saxon in origin. She said sharply, "Yes? What d' you want?" her glance darting all over Yasmin's person, her face looking like she smelled something bad. Yasmin wasn't carrying laundry, which made her suspect to Mrs. Crushley. Yasmin was black, which went a good distance towards making her dangerous as well. She could have a knife in her kit, after all. She could have a poisoned dart taken from a fellow tribesman tucked away in her hair. She said politely, "If I could have a word with Katja .. . ?" "Katja?" Mrs. Crushley declared, sounding as if Yasmin had asked if Jesus Christ happened to be working that day. "What you want with her, then?" "Just a word." "Don't see as I need to allow that, do I? "Nough that I'm employing her, in't it, without her taking social calls all day." Mrs. Crushley lifted the garment she was working on a man's white shirt and she used her crooked teeth to bite off a bit of thread from a button she'd been replacing. At the back of the shop, Katja raised her head. But for some reason, rather than smile a greeting immediately, she looked beyond Yasmin to the door. And then she looked back at Yasmin and smiled. It was the sort of thing anyone might have done, the sort of thing Yasmin once wouldn't have noticed. But now she found that she was acutely attuned to everything about Katja's behaviour. There were meanings everywhere; there were meanings within meanings. And that was down to that filthy detective. She said to Katja, "Forgot to ask about your tea this morning," with a wary glance at Mrs. Crushley. Mrs. Crushley snorted, saying, "Asking her about her tea, is it? In my day we ate wha' was put in front of us." Katja approached. Yasmin saw that she was soaked through with sweat. Her azure blouse clung to her torso like hunger. Her hair lay limply against her skull. But she'd never looked like this before used up and bedraggled at the end of a day since working at the laundry, and seeing her so now when the day was not even half over fired all of Yasmin's suspicions once again. If she never came home looking such a mess, Yasmin reasoned, she had to be going somewhere else before returning to the Doddington Grove Estate. She'd come to the laundry just to check up on Katja, to make sure she hadn't bunked off and put herself in a bad place with her probation officer. But like most people who tell themselves they're merely sating their curiosity or doing something for someone else's benefit, Yasmin received more information than she wanted. She said, "Wha' about it, then?" to Katja, her lips offering a smile that felt like a contortion. "Got any thoughts? I could do us lamb with couscous, if you like. That stew thing, remember?" Katja nodded. She wiped her forehead on her sleeve and used her cuff against her upper lip. She said, "Yes. This is good. Lamb is good, Yas. Thank you." And they stood there after that, perfectly mute. They exchanged a look as Mrs. Crushley watched them both over her half-moon glasses. She said, "Go' the information you was wanting, Missie Fancy Hairdo, I believe. Then best take your leave." Yasmin pressed her lips together to keep herself from making a choice between saying, "Where? Who7." to Katja or "Shit yourself, white cunt," to Mrs. Crushley. Katja spoke instead. She said quietly, "I must get back to work, Yas. See you tonight?" "Yeah. All right," Yasmin replied and she left without asking Katja what time. What time was the ultimate trap she could have set, the trap that went beyond having a look at Katja's appearance. With Mrs. Crushley sitting there, knowing what hour Katja got off work, it would have been easy to ask exactly when Katja would return from the laundry that evening and to watch for Mrs. Crushley's expression if the time didn't match up with Katja's hours of employment. But Yasmin didn't want to give the nasty sow the pleasure of drawing an inference of any kind about her relationship with Katja, so she went on her way and drove to Wandsworth. Now she stood on the street corner in the frigid wind. She examined the neighbourhood, and she set it down next to Doddington Grove Estate, which did not gain from the comparison. The street was clean, like it'd been swept. The pavement was clear of debris and fallen leaves. There were no stains from dog urine on the lamp posts and no piles of dog shit in the gutters. The houses were free of graffiti and displayed white curtains in the windows. No laundry hung dispiritedly from balconies, because there were no balconies: just a long row of terraced houses all well taken care of by their inhabitants. Someone could be happy here, Yasmin thought. Someone could make a special life here. She began to walk cautiously down the pavement. No one was about, but she still felt watched. She adjusted the button at the top of her jacket and pulled out a scarf to cover her hair. She knew it was a stupid thing to do. She knew it marked her: scared, less than, and worried about. But she did it anyway because she wanted to feel safe, at ease, and confident here, and she was willing to try anything to get that way. When she reached Number Fifty-five, she hesitated at the gate. She wondered at this final moment if she could really go through with it, and she asked herself if she really wanted to know. She cursed the black man who'd brought her to this moment, loathing not only him but herself: him for passing her the information in the first place, herself for making something out of it. But she had to know. She had too many questions that a simple knock on the door might answer. She couldn't leave until she'd confronted the fears that she'd too long been trying to ignore. She opened the gate into an untidy front garden. The path to the door was flagstones and the door itself was shiny red with a polished brass knocker in the centre. Autumn bare shrub branches arched over the porch, and a wire milk basket held three empty bottles, one of which had a note sticking out of it. Yasmin bent to grasp this note, thinking at the last moment that she wouldn't actually have to face ... to see ... Perhaps the note would tell her. She unrolled it against her palm, and read the words: "We're switching to two skimmed, one silver top from now on, please." That was all. The handwriting gave away nothing. Age, sex, race, creed. The message could have been penned by anyone. She played her fingers into her palms, encouraging her hand to lift and do its work. She took a step back and looked at the bay window, in the hope that she might see something there that might save her from what she was about to do. But the curtains were like the others in the street: swathes of material that invited some little light into the room and against which a silhouette could be seen at night. But during the day, they protected the room within from outside watchers. So Yasmin was left with the door again. She thought, Bugger this. She had a right to know. She marched to the door and rapped the knocker forcefully against the wood. She waited. Nothing. She rang the bell. She heard it sounding right near the door, one of those fancy bells that played a tune. But the result was the same. Nothing. Yasmin didn't want to think she'd come all the way from Kennington to learn nothing. She didn't want to think what it would be like, continuing with Katja as if she didn't have any doubts. It was better to know: good or bad. Because if she knew, then she'd have a clear sense of what she was meant to do next. His card weighed in her pocket like a four by two inch sheet of pure lead. She'd first looked at it, turning it over and over in her hands, as the hours passed last night without Katja coming home. She'd phoned, of course. She'd said, "Yas, I'll be late," and she'd said, "It's a bit complicated for the phone. Tell you later, shall I?" when Yasmin had asked what was up. But later hadn't come when Yasmin expected and after several hours, she'd got out of bed, gone to the window, tried to use the darkness to understand something of what was happening, and finally gone to her jacket where she'd found that card he'd given her in the shop. She'd stared at the name: Winston Nkata. African, that was. But he sounded West Indies when he wasn't being dead careful to sound plod. A phone number was printed on the bottom, to the left of the name, a Met number that she'd sooner die than ring. A pager number was across from it, in the right corner. "You page me," he'd said. "Day or night." Or had he said that? In any case, what did it matter because she wasn't about to grass to a cop. Not in this lifetime. She wasn't that stupid. So she'd shoved the card into her jacket pocket where she felt it now, a little piece of lead growing hot, growing heavy, weighing her right shoulder down with the pull of it, drawing her like metal to a magnet and the magnet was an action she wouldn't take. She stepped away from the house. She backed down the flagstone path to the pavement. She felt behind her for the gate, and backed through it as well. If someone intended to peer through those curtains as she departed, then she damn well intended to see who it was. But that didn't happen. The house was empty. Yasmin made her decision when a DHL delivery van rumbled into Galveston Road. It puttered along as the driver looked for the correct address and when he had the right house, he left the van running as he trotted up to the door to make his delivery three houses away from where Yasmin stood. She waited as he rang the bell. Ten seconds and that door was opened. An exchange of pleasantries, a signature on a clipboard, and the delivery man trotted back to his van and went on his way, passing Yasmin where she stood on the pavement, giving her a glance that registered only female, black, bad face, decent body, good for a shag. Then he and his van were gone. But possibility was not. Yasmin walked towards the house where he'd made the delivery. She rehearsed her lines. She paused out of sight of the window identical to the window on Number Fifty-five and she took a moment to scribble that address Number Fifty-five, Galveston Road, Wandsworth, on the back of the detective's card. Then she removed her headscarf and refashioned it into a turban. She took her earrings off and shoved the brass and beads of them into her pocket. And although her jacket was buttoned to the neck, she undid it and undipped her necklace just for good measure -depositing it into her shoulder bag, redoing her jacket, and flattening its collar to a humble and unfashionable angle. Garbed as well as she could be for the part, she entered the garden of the DHL house and rapped hesitantly on its front door. There was a spy hole in it, so she lowered her head, took her bag from her shoulder and held it awkwardly like a handbag in front of her. She arranged her features as best she could to portray humility, fear, worry, and a desperate eagerness to please. In a moment, she heard the voice. "Yes? What can I do for you?" It came from behind the closed door but the fact of it told Yasmin she'd cleared the first hurdle. She looked up. "Please, can you help me?" she asked. "I have come to clean your neighbour's house, but she is not at home. Number Fifty-five?" "She works during the day," the voice called back. "But I do not understand .. ." Yasmin held up the detective's card. She said, "If you see .. . Her husband wrote it all down .. . ?" "Husband?" The locks on the door were released and the door itself was opened. A middle-aged woman stood there, a pair of scissors in her hand. Seeing Yasmin's gaze go to the scissors and her expression alter, the woman said, "Oh. Sorry. I was opening a parcel. Here. Let me have a look at that." Yasmin willingly handed over the card. The woman read the address. "Yes. I see. It certainly does say .. . But you said her husband?" And when Yasmin nodded, the woman turned the card over and read the front of it, just exactly what Yasmin herself had read and read again on the previous night: Winston Nkata, Detective Constable, Metropolitan Police. A phone number and a pager number. Everything on the complete up and up. "Well, of course, the fact that he's a policeman .. ." the woman said thoughtfully. But then, "No. There's a mistake, I'm sure. No one named Nkata lives there." She handed the card back. "You are sure?" Yasmin asked, drawing her eyebrows together, attempting to look her most pathetic. "He said I should clean .. ." "Yes, yes, my dear girl. I'm sure that he did. But he's given you the wrong address for some reason. No one named Nkata lives in that house or ever has done. It's been lived in for years by a family called McKay." "McKay?" Yasmin asked. And her heart felt lighter. Because if there was a partner to Harriet Lewis the solicitor as Katja had claimed, then her fears were groundless. "Yes, yes, McKay," the woman said. "Noreen McKay. And her niece and nephew. Very nice woman, she is, very pleasant, but she isn't married. Never has been as far as I know. And certainly not to someone called Nkata, if you know what I mean and no offence intended." "I... yes. Yes. I see." Yasmin whispered because that was all she could force from herself upon learning the full name of the occupant of Number Fifty-five. "I do thank you, madam. Thank you very much indeed." She backed away. The woman came forward. "See here, are you all right, Miss?" she asked. "Oh yes. Yes. Just.. . When one expects work and is disappointed .. ." "I'm awfully sorry. If I hadn't had my own cleaner here yesterday, I'd not mind letting you have a go with my house. You seem decent enough. May I have your name and number on the chance my woman doesn't work out? She's one of those Filipinos, and they can't always be relied on, if you know what I mean." Yasmin raised her head. What she wanted to say battled with what she needed to say, given the situation. Need won. There were other considerations beyond insult right now. She said, "You are very kind, madam," and she called herself Nora and recited eight digits at random, all of which the woman eagerly wrote onto a pad that she took from a table by the door. "Well," she said as she wrote the last number with a flourish. "Our little encounter might turn out all for the best." She offered a smile. "You never know, do you?" How true, Yasmin thought. She nodded, went back to the street, and returned to Number Fifty-five for a final look at it. She felt numb and for a moment she encouraged herself to believe that the numbness was a sign of not caring about what she'd just learned. But she knew the reality was that she was in shock. And between the time of the shock's wearing off and the rage's setting in, she hoped she'd have five minutes to decide what to do. Winston Nkata's pager went off while Lynley was reading the action reports that DCI Leach's team had been sending in to the incident room for compilation during the morning. In the absence of both eyewitnesses and evidence at the crime scene beyond the paint chips, the vehicle used in the first hit and run was what was left as the murder squad's focus. But according to the activities reports, the town's body shops were proving to be fallow ground so far, as were the parts shops where something like a chrome bumper might possibly be purchased to replace one damaged in an accident. Lynley looked up from one of the reports to see Nkata scrutinising his pager and contemplatively fingering his facial scar. He took off his reading glasses and said, "What is it, Winnie?" and the constable replied, "Don't know, man." But he said it slowly, as if he had his thoughts on the subject, after which he went to a phone on a nearby desk where a WPC was entering data into the computer. "I think our next step is Swansea, sir," Lynley had said to DCI Leach by mobile once they'd completed their interview with Raphael Robson. "It seems to me that we've got all the principals in hand at this point. Let's run their names through the DVLA and see if one of them has an older car registered, in addition to what they're driving round town. Start with Raphael Robson and see what he has. It could be in a lock-up somewhere." Leach had agreed. And this is what the WPC at the computer was doing at the moment: contacting the vehicle department, plugging in names, and looking for ownership of a classic or simply an old car. "We can't discount the possibility that one of our suspects just has access to cars old or otherwise," Leach had pointed out. "Could be the friend of a collector, for instance. Friend of a car salesman. Friend of someone who works as a mechanic." "And we also can't discount the possibility that the car was stolen, recently purchased from a private party but not registered, or brought over from Europe to do the job and already returned with no one the wiser," Lynley said. "In which case the DVLA will be a dead end. But in the absence of anything else .. ." "Right," Leach said. "What've we got to lose?" Both of them knew that what they had to lose was Webberly, whose condition had altered perilously in Charing Cross Hospital. "Heart attack," Hillier had said tersely from intensive care. "Just three hours ago. Blood pressure went down, heart started acting dodgy, then .. . barn. It was massive." "Jesus Christ," Lynley said. "Used those things on him .. . what're they .. . electrical shocks .. ." "Those paddles?" "Ten times. Eleven. Randie was there. They got her out of the room but not before the alarms and the shouting and .. . It's a bloody mess, this." "What are they telling you, sir?" "He's monitored every which way to Sunday. IVs, tubes, machines, wires. Ventricular fibrillation, this was. It could happen again. Anything could." "How's Randie?" "Coping." Hillier didn't give Lynley a chance to inquire about anything else. Instead, he went on gruffly as if wishing to dismiss a topic that was too frightening to entertain, "Who've you brought in for questioning?" He wasn't happy when he learned that Leach's best efforts had failed to gain anything substantial from Pitchley-Pitchford-Pytches upon his third interview. He was also not pleased to learn that the equally best efforts of the teams who were working the sites of the two hit and runs had uncovered nothing more useful than what they had already known about the car. He was moderately satisfied with the news from forensic about the paint chips and the age of the vehicle. But information was one thing; an arrest was another. And he Goddamn wanted a bloody arrest. "Do you have that message, Acting Superintendent?" Lynley took a deep breath and put the heightened level of Hillier's acerbity down to his understandable dread about Webberly. He did indeed have the message, he told the AC steadily. Was Miranda really all right, though? Was there anything he could .. . ? Had Helen at least managed to get her to eat something? "She's gone to Frances," Hillier said. "Randie?" "Your wife. Laura's got exactly nowhere, can't even budge her from her bedroom, so Helen's decided to try her hand. Good woman, there." Hillier harrumphed. He would, Lynley knew, never venture any closer to a compliment. "Thank you, sir." "Get on with things. I'm staying here. I don't want Randie alone should anything .. . should she be asked to decide .. ." "Right. Yes, sir. That's the best idea, isn't it?" Now, Lynley watched Nkata. Curiously, the constable was protecting his phone conversation from eavesdroppers with a broad shoulder lifted to shield the mouthpiece of the receiver. Lynley frowned at this, and when Nkata rang off, he said, "Get anything?" Rubbing his hands together, the DC said, "Hope so, man. Bird who lives with Katja Wolff s asking for another word. That's who paged. Think I ought .. . ?" He nodded towards the doorway, but the motion seemed more a bow to obligation than an actual request for direction because the constable's fingers began tapping against the pocket of his trousers as if eager to dig out his car keys. Lynley reflected upon what Nkata had already told him about his most recent interview with both women. "Did she say what she wanted?" "Just a word. Said she didn't want to talk on the phone." "Why not?" Nkata shrugged and shifted his weight from one foot to the other. "Villains, man. You know how they are. Always like to be the ones pulling the strings." That certainly rang an authentic note. If a convict was going to grass on a mate, that convict generally named the time, the place, and the circumstances under which the gras sing would occur. It was a power play that acted as a salve to their conscience when they lived the part of no honour among thieves. But lags rarely bore love for cops, and caution suggested that a cop be wise to the fact that a villain liked nothing better than to throw spanners if he could, with the size of the spanners generally matching the proportions of his animosity for the police. He said, "What's she called again, Winnie?" "Who?" "The woman who paged you. Wolff s flat mate." And when Nkata told him, Lynley asked what crime had sent Yasmin Edwards to prison. "Knifed her husband," Nkata said. "Killed him. She was in five years. But I got the press ion he beat her up a lot. She's got a bad face, 'spector. Scarred up. She and Wolff live with her son. Daniel. Ten, eleven years old. Nice kid. Should I .. . ?" Again the anxious nod at the door. Lynley pondered the wisdom of sending Nkata south of the river again on his own. His very zeal to take on the task gave Lynley pause. On the one hand, Nkata would be eager to make up for his earlier gaffe. On the other hand, he was inexperienced, and the appetite he had for again confronting Yasmin Edwards suggested the potential for a loss of objectivity. As long as the potential was there, Nkata not to mention the case itself was in jeopardy. Just as Webberly had been, Lynley realised, all those years ago in another investigation. They kept coming full circle to that other murder, he thought. There had to be a reason for that. He said, "Has she got an axe to grind, this Yasmin Edwards?" "With me, you mean?" "With cops in general." "Could have, yeah." "Mind how you go, then." Nkata said, "Will do," and he hastened out of the incident room, car keys already in his palm. When the constable was gone, Lynley sat at a desk and put on his glasses. The situation they were in was maddening. He'd been involved in cases before in which they'd had mounds of evidence but no one to whom it could be attached. He'd been involved in cases in which they'd had motives leaping out from the wallpaper in the sitting room of every suspect they questioned but no evidence they could apply to the suspects. And he'd been involved in cases in which the means and the opportunity to kill could be applied left, right, and centre and all that was missing was clarity on the motive. But this .. . How was it possible that two people could be hit and abandoned on populated streets without someone seeing something other than a black vehicle? Lynley wondered. And how was it possible that the first victim could actually be dragged from point A to point B in Crediton Hill once the hit took place without someone noticing what was going on? The moving of the body was an important detail, and Lynley fetched the latest report from forensic to examine what they'd come up with from evidence taken from Eugenie Davies' body. The forensic pathologist would have combed it, probed it, studied it, and analysed it. And if there was a trace of evidence left on it this despite the rain of the evening the forensic pathologst would have found it. Lynley flipped through the paperwork. Nothing under her fingernails, all blood on the body her own, remnants of earth fallen from tyres bearing no telling characteristics like minerals peculiar to one part of the country, granules caught up in her hair similar to those on the street itself, two hairs on her body one grey and one brown which, under analysis Lynley's interest sharpened. Two hairs, two different colours, an analysis. Surely this amounted to something. He read the report, frowning, wading through descriptions of cuticle, cortex, and medulla and celebrating the initial conclusion offered by SO7: The hairs were mammalian in origin. But when he continued, fighting his way through the morass of technical terms from the macro fibrillar ultra structure of the medullary cells to the electrophoretic variants of the structural proteins, he found that the results of the forensic examination of the hairs was inconclusive. How the hell could that possibly be? He reached for a phone and punched in the number of the forensic lab across the river. After speaking to three technicians and a secretary, he was finally able to pin someone down who explained in layman's terms why a study of hair, made in this century of science so advanced that a microscopic particle of skin for God's sake could identify a killer, would offer inconclusive results. "Actually," Dr. Claudia Knowles told him, 'we have no way of telling if the hairs even came from the killer, Inspector. They could well be from the victim, you know." "How can that be?" "First, because we have no scalp attached to either of them. Second -and here's the trickier part because there's a vast variation in features even within hairs that come from one individual. So we could take dozens of samples of your victim's hair and still not be able to match them to the two hairs found on her body. And all the time they could still be hers. Because of the possible variations. Do you see what I mean?" "But what about DNA typing? What's the point of combing for hairs in the first place if we can't use them ' "It's not that we can't use them," Dr. Knowles interrupted. "We can and we will. But even then, what we'll learn and this isn't done overnight, which I'm sure you're already aware of is whether the hairs did come from your victim. Which will help you, of course. But if the hairs didn't come from her, you'll be helped only as far as knowing that someone was close enough to her body either before or after her death to have left a hair or two on it." "What about two people being close enough to her body to leave a hair? Since one hair was grey and one was brown?" "That could have happened. But even then, you see, we can't discount the possibility that prior to her death she embraced someone who quite innocently left a hair behind in the process. And even if we have the DNA typing in front of us, to prove that she couldn't have embraced anyone who is currently in her life, what do we do with that typing, Inspector, without someone on the other end giving us a sample to match it to?" God. Yes. That was the problem. That would always be the blasted problem. Lynley thanked Dr. Knowles and rang off, flinging the report to one side. They needed a break. He read through the notes of his interviews again: what Wiley had said, what Staines had said, what Davies, Robson, and the younger Davies had said. There had to be something he was overlooking. But he couldn't dig it out of what he had written. All right, he thought. Time to try another tack. He left the station and made the quick drive to West Hampstead. He found Crediton Hill a short distance from Finchley Road, and he parked at the top end, got out, and began to pace. The street was lined with cars and it possessed that uninhabited air of a place where all the occupants leave for work each morning not to return till night. Chalk marks on the tarmac indicated the spot where Eugenie Davies' body had lain, and Lynley stood upon these and gazed down the street in the direction the deadly vehicle would have come. She'd been hit and then driven over several times, which seemed to indicate that she'd either not been thrown as Webberly had or that she'd been thrown directly in front of the car, making the act of driving back and forth over her an easy piece of business. Then she'd been dragged to one side, her body half shoved beneath a Vauxhall. But why? Why would her killer risk being seen? Why not just drive off and leave her lying in the middle of the road? Of course, putting her to one side might have served the purpose of keeping her from being noticed at once in the dark and the rain, thereby assuring she'd be dead when someone finally did find her. But it was such a risk to get out of the car at all. Unless the killer had a reason for doing so ... Such as living in the neighbourhood? Yes. It was possible. But was anything else? Lynley went on to the pavement, pacing along and thinking about every variation he could come up with on the theme of killer-victim-motive, killer-moving-the-broken-body, and killer-getting-out-of-the-car. All he could come up with was her handbag: something she'd carried inside it, something the killer had wanted, had known she'd have with her, had needed to obtain. But the bag had been found beneath another car in the street, in a spot where it was unlikely that a killer working in haste and in the darkness -would have seen it. And its contents were in order as far as anyone could tell. Unless, of course, the killer had removed a single item like a letter, perhaps? and then thrown the bag beneath the car where it ultimately had been found. Lynley paced and considered this and felt as if a Greek chorus had taken up residence in his head, reciting not only all the possibilities but also the consequences of his choosing one of them and investing an ounce of belief in it. He walked several yards past several houses, past the autumn coloured hedges that edged their gardens. He was just about to turn back and walk to his car when something glittering on the pavement caught his eye, quite near a yew hedge that looked more recently planted than the others in the street. He bent to this like Sherlock Holmes redeemed. But it proved to be just a shard of glass that, along with a few other shards, had been swept from the pavement into the flower bed where the hedge was planted. He took a pencil from his jacket pocket and turned the shards over, then dug round in the earth and found a few more. And because he'd never felt quite so much without resources as he was feeling in this investigation, he took out his handkerchief and collected them all. Back in his car, he phoned home, seeking Helen. It was hours since she'd turned up at Charing Cross Hospital, hours since she'd trekked to Webberly's house to see what could be made of Frances. But she wasn't there. And she wasn't at work in Chelsea with St. James. This, he decided, was not a good sign. He drove to Stamford Brook. In Kensington Square, Barbara Havers parked where she'd parked before: by the line of bollards that prevented traffic entering the square from the north in Derry Street. She walked to the Convent of the Immaculate Conception, but instead of going to the door straightaway and requesting to speak with Sister Cecilia Mahoney once again, she lit a cigarette and ventured farther along the pavement to the distinguished, brick, Dutch-gabled house where so much had happened two decades in the past. It was the tallest building on its side of the street: five floors with a basement which was accessed by a narrow stairway that curved down from the flagstone-covered front garden. Two brick pillars topped with white stone finials sided the wrought-iron entrance gate, and Barbara swung this gate open, entered, closed it behind her, and stood looking up at the house. It was quite a contrast to Lynn Davies' small dwelling on the other side of the river. With its french windows and balconies, its creamy woodwork, its solemn pediments and dog-toothed cornices, its fanlights and its stained glass windows, it and the neighbourhood that surrounded it couldn't have been more different to the environment in which Virginia Davies had lived her life. But there was another difference besides the obvious physical one, and Barbara thought about it as she surveyed the house. Inside had lived a terrible man, in Lynn Davies' words, a man who couldn't bear to be in the same room as a grandchild who was, in his eyes, not what she should have been. The child had been unwelcome in this house, she'd been an object of continual loathing, so her mother had taken her away forever. And old Jack Davies terrible Jack Davies had been appeased. More, he'd been gratified, as it happened, because when his son got round to marrying again, Jack's next grandchild turned out to be a musical genius. Delight all round at that one, Barbara thought. The kid picked up a fiddle, made his mark, and gave the name Davies the glory it deserved. But then came the next grandchild's birth, and old Jack Davies terrible Jack Davies was made to look imperfection in the face again. But on this second go with a defective child, things were more dicey for Jack. Because if old Jack Davies drove this mother off with his relentless demands to 'keep her out of my sight, put that creature away somewhere', chances were that this mother would take her other child with her. And that would mean goodbye Gideon and goodbye to basking vicariously in the glory of everything Gideon stood to accomplish. When Sonia Davies was drowned in her bath, had the police even known about Virginia? Barbara wondered. And if they had, had the family managed to keep old Jack's attitude to her under wraps? Probably. He'd gone through a horrific time in the war, he'd never recovered, he was a military hero. But he also sounded like a man who was five notes short of a full sonata, and how was anyone to know how far a man like that would go when he'd been thwarted? Barbara went back to the pavement, closing the gate behind her. She flipped her cigarette into the street and retraced her steps to the Convent of the Immaculate Conception. This time round, she found Sister Cecilia Mahoney in the enormous garden behind the main building. With another nun, she was raking up leaves from a mammoth sycamore tree that could have shaded an entire hamlet. They'd so far made five piles of leaves, which formed colourful mounds across the lawn. In the distance where a wall marked the end of the convent's property and protected it from the trains of the District line that rumbled above ground throughout the day, a man in a boiler suit and a knitted hat was tending a fire where some of the gathered leaves were burning. "You need to have a care with that sort of thing," Barbara said to Sister Cecilia as she joined her on the lawn. "One wrong move and all of Kensington'll go up in smoke. I don't expect you want that." "With no Wren to build its replacement," Sister Cecilia noted. "Yes. We're being quite careful, Constable. George doesn't leave the fire unattended. And I'm thinking it's George who's got the better bargain. We do the gathering and he makes the offering that God receives with pleasure." "Pardon?" The nun drew her rake along the lawn, its tines snaring a cluster of leaves. "Biblical allusion, if you'll pardon me. Cain and Abel. Abel's fire produced smoke that went heavenward." "Oh. Right." "You don't know the Old Testament?" "Just the lying, knowing, and begetting parts. And I've got most of those memorised." Sister Cecilia laughed and took her rake to lean it against a bench that encircled the sycamore at the garden's centre. She returned to Barbara, saying, "Sure there was a great deal of lying and begetting going on in those days, wasn't there, Constable? But then, they had to set about it, didn't they, since they'd been told to populate the world." Barbara smiled. "Could I have a word?" "Of course. You'll be preferring to have it inside the convent, I expect." Sister Cecilia didn't wait for a reply. She merely said to her companion, "Sister Rose, if I can leave you to this for a quarter of an hour .. . ?" and when the other nun nodded, she led the way to a short flight of concrete steps which took them to the back door of the dun brick building. They walked down a lino-floored corridor to a door marked visitors' room. Here, Sister Cecilia knocked and when there was no reply, she swung the door open saying, "Would you like a cup of tea, Constable? A coffee? I think we've a biscuit or two." Barbara demurred. Just conversation, she told the nun. "You don't mind if I .. . ?" Sister Cecilia indicated an electric kettle, which stood on a chipped, plastic tray along with a tin of Earl Grey tea and several mismatched cups and saucers. She plugged the kettle in and fetched from the top of a small chest of drawers a box of sugar cubes, three of which she popped into a cup, saying serenely to Barbara, "Sweet tooth. But God forgives small vices in us all. I would feel less guilty, though, if you'd be taking a biscuit at least. They're Weight Watchers. Oh but sure, I don't mean to imply that you're needing to ' "No offence taken," Barbara interrupted. "I'll have one." Sister Cecilia looked mischievous. "They do come in packets of two, Constable." "Hand them over, then. I'll cope." With her tea made and her biscuits in their little packet on a separate saucer, Sister Cecilia was prepared to join Barbara. They sat on two vinyl-covered chairs next to a window that overlooked the garden where Sister Rose was still raking leaves. A low veneer table separated them, its surface holding a variety of religious magazines and one copy of Elle, heavily thumbed. Barbara told the nun that she'd met Lynn Davies and asked if Sister Cecilia knew about this earlier marriage and this additional child of Richard Davies. Sister Cecilia confirmed that she had long known, that she'd learned about Lynn and that 'poor dear mite of hers' from Eugenie shortly after Gideon's birth. "It came as quite a shock to Eugenie, to be sure, Constable. She'd not known Richard was even divorced, and she spent some time reflecting on what it meant that he hadn't told her prior to their marriage." "I expect she felt betrayed." "Oh, it wasn't the personal side of the omission that concerned her. At least, if it was, she didn't discuss that part of it with me. It was the spiritual and religious implications that Eugenie wrestled with during those first years after Gideon's birth." "What sort of implications?" "Well, the holy Church recognises marriage as a permanent covenant between a man and a woman.." "So was Mrs. Davies concerned that if the Church saw her husband's first marriage as his legitimate one, her own marriage would be considered bigamous? And the kids from that marriage illegitimate?" Sister Cecilia took a sip of tea. "Yes and no," she replied. "The situation was complicated by the fact that Richard himself wasn't Catholic. He wasn't actually anything, poor man. He hadn't been married in any church in the first place, so Eugenie's real question was whether he'd lived in sin with Lynn and if the child from that union who would thus be conceived in sin bore the mark of God's judgement upon her. And if that were the case, did Eugenie herself run the risk of calling down God's judgement upon herself as well?" "For having married a man who'd "lived in sin", d'you mean?" "Ah no. For not herself having married him in the Church." "The Church wouldn't allow it?" "It was never a question of what the Church would or would not allow. Richard didn't want a religious ceremony, so they never had one. Just the civil procedure at the register office." "But as a Catholic, wouldn't Mrs. Davies have wanted a Church wedding as well? Wouldn't she have been obliged to have one? I mean, for everything to be on the up and up with God and the Pope." "That's how it is, my dear. But Eugenie was Catholic only as far as it went." "Meaning?" "Meaning that she received some sacraments, but not others. She accepted some beliefs, but not others." "When you join up, aren't you supposed to swear on the Bible or something that you'll abide by the rules? I mean, we know that she wasn't brought up Catholic, so does the Church take on members who abide by some rules and not by others?" "You must remember that the Church has no secret police to make certain its members are walking the straight and narrow, Constable," the nun replied. She took a bite from her biscuit and munched. "God has given us each a conscience so that we can monitor our own behaviour. Isn't it true, of course, that there are many topics on which individual Catholics part ways with Holy Mother the Church, but whether that puts their eternal salvation into jeopardy is something that only God could tell us." "Yet Mrs. Davies seemed to believe that God gets even with sinners during their lifetime, if she thought that Virginia was God's way of dealing with Richard and Lynn." "Sure it is that when a misfortune befalls someone, people often interpret it that way. But consider Job. What was his sin that he was so tried by God?" "Knowing and begetting on the wrong side of the sheets?" Barbara asked. "I can't remember." "You can't remember because there was no sin. Just the terrible trials of his faith in the Almighty." Sister Cecilia took up her tea, wiping the biscuit crumbs from her fingers onto the nubby material of her skirt. "Is that what you told Mrs. Davies, then?" "I pointed out that had God wished to punish her, He certainly wouldn't have started out by giving her Gideon a perfectly healthy child as the first fruit of her marriage to Richard." "But as to Sonia?" "Did she consider that child her punishment from God for her sins?" Sister Cecilia clarified. "She never said as much. But from the way she reacted when she was told about the wee one's condition .. . And then when she stopped attending Church entirely once the baby died ..." The nun sighed, brought her cup to her lips and held it there as she considered how to reply. She finally said, "We can only surmise, Constable. We can only take the questions she asked with regard to Lynn and Virginia and infer from them how she herself might have felt and what she might have believed when she was faced with a similar trial." "What about the rest of them?" "The rest?" "The rest of the family. Did she mention how they felt? About Sonia? Once they knew .. . ?" "She never said." "Lynn says she left in part because of Richard Davies' dad. She says he had a few cogs not working but the ones that did work were nasty enough for her to be glad the rest were misfiring. If a cog misfires. But I expect you know what I mean." "Eugenie didn't talk about the household." "She didn't mention anyone wanting to get rid of Sonia? Like Richard? Or his dad? Or anyone?" Sister Cecilia's blue eyes widened over the biscuit she'd raised to her lips. She said, "Mary and Joseph. No. No. This was not a house of evil people. Troubled people, perhaps, as we're all troubled from time to time. But to want to be rid of a baby so desperately that one of them might have .. . ? No. I can't think that of any of them." "But someone did kill her, and you told me yesterday that you didn't believe it was Katja Wolff." "Didn't and don't," the nun affirmed. "But someone had to have done the deed unless you believe that the hand of God swept down and held that baby under the water. So who? Eugenie herself? Richard? Granddad? The lodger? Gideon?" "He was eight years old!" "And jealous that a second child had come to take the spotlight off him?" "She could hardly do that." "But she could take everyone's attention from him. She could take up their time. She could take most of their money. She could tap the well till the well was dry. And if it went dry, where would that leave Gideon?" "No eight-year-old child thinks that far into the future." "But someone else might have, someone who had a vested interest in keeping him front and centre in the household." "Yes. Well. I don't know who that someone might be." Barbara watched the nun place half her biscuit onto the saucer. She watched as Sister Cecilia went to the kettle and switched it on for a second cup of tea. She weighed her preconceived notions about nuns with what information she'd gathered from this one and the air with which Sister Cecilia had parted with it. She concluded that the nun was telling her everything she knew. In their earlier interview, Sister Cecilia had said that Eugenie stopped attending church when Sonia died. So she Sister Cecilia would no longer have had the opportunity she'd once had for heart-to-heart chats of the sort that passed along crucial information. She said, "What happened to the other baby?" "The other .. . ? Oh. Are you speaking of Katja's child?" "My DCI wants me to track him down." "He's in Australia, Constable. He's been there since he was twelve years old. And as I told you when we first spoke, if Katja wished to find him, she'd have come to me at once upon her release. You must believe me. The terms of the adoption asked the parents to provide annual updates about the child, so I've always known where he was and I'd have provided Katja with that information any time she asked for it." "But she didn't?" "She did not." Sister Cecilia headed for the door. "If you'll excuse me for a moment, I'll fetch something you might want to see." The nun left the room just as the electric kettle brought the water to a boil and clicked off. Barbara rose and brewed a second cup of Earl Grey for Sister Cecilia, scoring another packet of the biscuits for herself. She'd crammed these down her throat and added the three cubes of sugar to Sister Cecilia's tea when the nun returned, a manila envelope in her hand. She sat, knees and ankles together, and spread the contents of the envelope on her lap. Barbara saw they consisted of letters and photographs, both snap shots and studio portraits. "He's called Jeremy, Katja's son," Sister Cecilia told her. "He'll be twenty in February. He was adopted by a family called Watts, along with three other children. They're in Adelaide now, all of them. He favours his mother, I think." Barbara took the photos that Sister Cecilia offered her. In them, she saw that the nun had maintained a pictorial record of the child's life. Jeremy was fair and blue-eyed, although the blond hair of his childhood had darkened to stripped pine in his adolescence. He'd gone through a gawky period round the time his family had taken him and his siblings to Australia, but once he'd passed through that, he was handsome enough. Straight nose, square jaw, ears flat against his skull, he would do for an Aryan, Barbara thought. She said, "Katja Wolff doesn't know that you have these?" Sister Cecilia said, "As I told you, she wouldn't ever see me. Even when it came time to arrange for Jeremy's adoption, she wouldn't speak to me. The prison acted as our go-between: The warden told me Katja wanted an adoption and the warden told me when the time had arrived. Sure, I don't know if Katja ever saw the baby. All I know is that she wanted him placed with a family at once, and she wanted me to see to it, as soon as was possible after the birth." Barbara handed the pictures back, saying, "She didn't want him to go to the father?" "Adoption was what she wanted." "Who was the dad?" "We didn't speak ' "Got that. I know. But you knew her. You knew all of them. So you must have had an idea or two. There were three men in the house that we know of: the Granddad, Richard Davies, and the lodger, who was a bloke called James Pitchford. There were four, if you count Raphael Robson, the violin teacher. Five, if you want to count Gideon and think Katja might have liked to have at them young. He was precocious in one way. Why not in another?" The nun looked affronted. "Katja was not a child molester." "She might not have seen it as molestation. Women don't, do they, when they're initiating a male. Hell, there are tribes where it's customary for older women to take young boys in hand." "Be that as it may, this was not a tribe. And Gideon was certainly not the father of that baby. I doubt and here the nun blushed hotly "I doubt that he would been capable of the act." "Then whoever it was, he must have had reason to keep his part in it under wraps. Else why not come forward and lay claim to the kid once Katja got her twenty year sentence? Unless, of course, he didn't want to be known as the man who put a killer in the club." "Why does it have to be someone from the house at all?" Sister Cecilia asked. "And why is it important to know?" "I'm not sure it is important," Barbara admitted. "But if the father of her baby is somehow involved with everything else that happened to Katja Wolff, then he might be in danger right now. If she's behind two hit and runs." "Two .. . ?" "The officer who headed the investigation into Sonia's death was hit last night. He's in a coma." Sister Cecilia's fingers reached for the crucifix she wore round her neck. They curled round it and held on fast as the nun said, "I cannot believe Katja had anything to do with that." "Right," Barbara said. "But sometimes we end up having to believe what we don't want to believe. That's the way of the world, Sister." "It is not the way of my world," the nun declared. Gideon 6 NOVEMBER I've been dreaming again, Dr. Rose. I'm standing on the stage at the Barbican, with the lights blindingly bright above me. The orchestra is behind me, and the maestro whose face I cannot see taps on his lectern. The music begins four measures from the cellos and I lift my instrument and prepare to join in. Then from somewhere in the vast hall, I hear it: A baby has begun crying. It echoes through the hall, but I'm the only person who seems to notice. The cellos continue to play, the rest of the strings join them, and I know that my solo will be fast upon us. I cannot think, I cannot play, I cannot do anything but wonder why the maestro won't stop the orchestra, won't turn to the audience, won't demand that someone have the simple courtesy to take the screaming child out of the auditorium so that we can concentrate on our playing. There is a full measure's rest before I'm to begin my solo, and as I wait for it to arrive, I keep glancing out to the audience. But I can see nothing because of the lights, and they are far more blinding than lights ever are in an actual auditorium. Indeed, they're the sort of lights one imagines to be shone upon a suspect who is under interrogation. I begin. Of course, it isn't right. It isn't in the right key. To my left, the lead violin stands abruptly and I see that he's Raphael Robson. I want to say, "Raphael, you're playing! With an audience, you're playing'." but the rest of the violins follow his lead and leap to their feet as well. They begin to protest to the maestro, as do the cellos and the basses. I hear all their voices. I try to drown them out with my playing and I try to drown the baby out, but I cannot. I want to tell them that it's not me, it's not my fault, and I say, "Can't you hear? Can't you hear it?" as I continue to play. And I watch the maestro as I do so, because he's continuing to direct the orchestra as if they'd never stopped playing in the first place. Raphael then approaches the maestro, who turns to me. And he is my father. "Play!" he snarls. And I'm so surprised to see him there where he should not be that I back away and the darkness of the auditorium envelops me. I begin to search for the screaming baby. I go up the aisle, feeling my way in the dark, until I hear that the crying is coming from behind a closed door. I open this door. Suddenly, I am outside, in daylight, and in front of me is an enormous fountain. But this is not an ordinary fountain because standing in the water are a minister of some sort dressed all in black and a woman in white who is holding the yowling infant to her bosom. As I watch, the minister submerges them both the woman and the child that she holds in the water, and I know that the woman is Katja Wolff and that she's holding my sister. Somehow, I know I must get to that fountain, but my feet become too heavy to lift. So I watch and when Katja Wolff emerges from the water, she emerges alone. The water makes her white dress cling to her and through the material her nipples show as does her pubic hair, which is thick, dark as night, and coiling coiling coiling over her sex which still glistens through the wet dress she's wearing as if she's not wearing a dress at all. And I feel that stirring within me, that rush of desire I haven't felt in years. The throb begins and I welcome it and I no longer think of the concert I've left or the ceremony I've witnessed in the water. My feet are freed. I approach. Katja cups her breasts in her hands. But before I can reach the fountain and her, the minister blocks my way and I look at him and he is my father. He goes to her. He does to her what I want to do, and I am forced to watch as her body draws him in and begins to work him as the water slaps languidly against their legs. I cry out, and I awaken. And there it was between my legs, Dr. Rose, what I hadn't been able to manage in ... how many years? .. . since Beth. Throbbing, engorged, and ready for action, all because of a dream in which I was nothing but a voyeur of my father's pleasure. I lay there in the darkness, despising myself, despising my body and my mind and what both of them were telling me through the means of a dream. And as I lay there, a memory came to me. It is Katja, and she has come into the dining room where we're having dinner. She's carrying my sister who is dressed for bed, and it's very clear that she's excited about something because when Katja Wolff is excited, her English becomes more broken. She says, "See! See you must what she has done!" Granddad says irritably, "What is it now?" and there's a moment that I recognise as tension while all the adults look at each other: Mother at Granddad, Dad at Gran, Sarah-]ane at James the Lodger. He James is looking at Katja. And Katja is looking at Sonia. She says, "Show them, little one," and she sets my sister on the floor. She puts her on her bum but she doesn't prop her up as she's had to do in the past. Instead, she balances her carefully and removes her hands, and Sonia remains upright. "She sits alone!" Katja announces proudly. "Is this not a dream?" Mother gets to her feet, saying, "Wonderful, darling!" and goes to cuddle her. She says, "Thank you, Katja," and when she smiles, her face is radiant with delight. Granddad makes no comment at all because he doesn't look to see what Sonia has managed to do. Gran murmurs, "Lovely, my dear," and watches Granddad. Sarah-Jane Beckett makes a polite comment and attempts to draw James the Lodger into conversation. But it's a vain attempt because James is fixated on Katja, the way a starving dog might fixate on a rare piece of beef. And Katja herself is fixated on my father. "See how lovely is she!" Katja crows. "See what learns she and how quickly! What a good big girl is Sonia, yes. Every baby can thrive with Katja." Every baby. How had I forgotten those words and that look? How had it escaped me till now: what those words and that look really meant? What they had to have meant, because everyone freezes the way people freeze when a motion picture is reduced to a single frame. And a moment later in the breath of a second Mother picks up Sonia and says, "We're all quite sure that's the case, my dear." I saw it then, and I see it now. But I didn't understand because what was I, seven years old? What child that young can comprehend the full reality of the situation in which he's living? What child that young can infer from a single simple statement graciously said a woman's sudden understanding of a betrayal that has occurred and is continuing to occur within her own home? 9 NOVEMBER He kept that picture, Dr. Rose. Everything I know goes back to the fact that my father kept that single picture, a photograph that he himself must have taken and hidden away because how else could it possibly have come to be in his possession? So I see them, on a sunny afternoon in the summer, and he asks Katja to step into the garden so that he can take a photo of her with my sister. Sonia's presence, cradled in Katja's arms, legitimises the moment. Sonia is the excuse despite the fact that she is cradled in such a way that her face isn't visible to the camera. And that's an important detail as well because Sonia isn't perfect. Sonia is a freak, and a picture of Sonia whose face bears the manifestations of the congenital syndrome that afflicts her oblique palpebral fissures, I have learned they are called, epicanthal folds, and a mouth that is disproportionately small will serve as a constant reminder to Dad that he created for the second time in his life a child with physical and mental imperfections. So he doesn't want to capture her face on film, but he needs her there as an excuse. Are he and Katja lovers at the time? Or do they both just think about it then, each of them waiting for some sign from the other that will express an interest that cannot yet be spoken? And when it happens between them for the first time, who makes the move and what is the move that signals the direction they will soon be taking? She goes out for a breath of air on a stifling night, the kind of August night in London when a heat wave hits and there's no escaping the oppressive atmosphere created by polluted air hanging too long over the city, which is daily heated by the scorching sun and further poisoned by the diesel lorries that belch exhaust fumes along the streets. Sonia is asleep at long last, and Katja has ten precious minutes to herself. The darkness outside makes a false promise of deliverance from the heat trapped inside the house, so she walks out into it, out into the garden behind the house, which is where he finds her. "Terrible day," he says. "I'm burning up." "I too," she replies, and she watches him steadily. "I too burn, Richard." And that is enough. That final statement and especially the use of his Christian name constitute implicit permission, and he needs no other invitation. He surges towards her, and it begins between them, and this is what I see from the garden. Chapter Twenty Libby Neale had never been to Richard Davies' flat, so she didn't know what to expect when she drove Gideon there from the Temple. Asked about it, she might have guessed that he'd be living high out of very deep pockets. He'd been making such a deal about Gideon's not playing the violin for the past four months, it seemed reasonable to conclude that he needed a hefty income that only cash from Gideon on a regular basis could provide. So she said, "This is it, when Gideon told her to pull in at a parking space on the north side of a street called Cornwall Gardens. She looked at the neighbourhood with a vague sense of disappointment, taking in buildings that were okay genteel enough but dilapidated to the max. True, there were some decent looking places crammed in here and there, but the rest of them looked like they'd seen better days in another century. It got worse. Gideon, without replying to her question, led the way to a building that looked like prayers were holding it up. He used a key on a front door so warped away from the jamb that using a key in the first place seemed like an unnecessary courtesy applied to spare the door's feelings. A credit card would have done as well. When they were inside, he led her upstairs to a second door. This one wasn't warped, but someone had decorated it with a trail of green spray paint in the shape of a Z, like an Irish Zorro had come to call. Gideon said, "Dad?" as he swung the door open and they entered his father's flat. He said to Libby, "Wait here," which she was glad to do as he ducked into a kitchen that was just off the living room. The place gave her the major creeps. It was so not the kind of place she'd thought Richard Davies would've set himself up in. First off, what was with the colour scheme? Libby wondered. She was no decorator leave that to her mom and her sister who were into Feng Shui in a major way. But even she could tell that the colours in this place were guaranteed to make anyone want to take aleap from the nearest bridge. Puke green walls. Diarrhoea brown furniture. And weirdo art like that nude woman shown from neck to ankles with pubic hair looking like the inside of a toilet going through the flush cycle. What did that mean? Above the fireplace which for some reason was filled with books a circular display of tree branches had been pounded. These looked like they'd been made into walking sticks because they were sanded down and had holes punched through them and leather thongs threaded through the holes like wrist straps. But how weird to have them there in the first place. The only thing in the room that Libby saw and had expected to see were pictures of Gideon. There were tons of those. And they were all unified by the same boring theme: the violin. Surprise, surprise, Libby thought. Richard couldn't possibly have a shot of Gideon doing something he might like to do. Why show him flying kites on Primrose Hill? Why take a picture of him helping some kid from the East End learn how to hold a violin if he himself wasn't holding it, playing it, and making a bang-up salary for doing so? Richard, Libby thought, needed his butt kicked. He was so not helping Gideon get better. She heard a window in the kitchen creak open, heard Gideon shout for his father in the direction of the garden that she'd seen to the left of the building itself. Richard obviously wasn't out there, though, because after thirty seconds and a few more shouts, the window closed. Gideon came back through the living room and headed down the hall. He didn't say, "Wait here," this time, so Libby followed him. She'd had enough of the creepoid living room. He worked through the place back to front, saying, "Dad?" as he opened a bedroom door and then a bathroom door. Libby followed. She was about to tell him it was sort of obvious that Richard wasn't at home so why was Gideon yelling for him like he'd lost his hearing in the last twenty-four hours when he shoved on another door, swung it wide, and revealed the icing on the cake of the flat's overall weirdness. Gideon ducked through the doorway and she trailed him, saying, "Whoops! Oh, sorry," when she first caught a glimpse of the uniformed soldier standing just inside. It took her a moment to realise the soldier wasn't Richard playing dress-up with the hope of spooking the hell out of them. It was instead a mannequin. She approached it gingerly and said, "Geez. What the hell.. . ?" and glanced at Gideon. But he was already at a desk at the far side of the room, and he had its fold-down front opened and was rooting through all its cubbyholes, looking so intense that she figured he wouldn't hear her even if she asked what she wanted to ask, which was what the hell Richard was domgwith this weirdo piece of crap in his house and did Gid think Jill knew about it? There were display cases as well, the kinds that you saw in museums. And these were filled with letters, medals, commendations, telegrams, and all sorts of junk that upon inspection appeared to have come from World War II. On the walls were pictures from the same era, all showing a dude in the army. Here he was on his stomach, squinting down the barrel of a rifle like John Wayne in a war movie. There he was running alongside a tank. Next he was seated cross-legged on the ground, at the front of a pack of similar dudes with their weapons slung over their bodies all casual, like having an AK47 or whatever it had been in those days across your shoulder was pretty much par for the course. It wasn't what anyone with a grain of sense would show himself doing today. Not unless he was part of some neo-Nazi freedom fighter let's-get-rid-of-everyone-who's-not-a-WASP group. Libby felt queasy. Getting out of this place in the next thirty seconds didn't seem like such a bad idea. Behind her, the drawers slammed shut and other drawers opened. Paperwork shuffled. Things flopped to the floor. She turned and watched what Gideon was doing, thinking, Richard's really going to blow a fuse over this one, but then not much caring because Richard was reaping what Richard had spent a long time sowing. She said, "Gideon. What are we looking for?" "He's got her address. He has to have it." "That doesn't make sense." "He knows where she is. He's seen her." "Did he tell you that?" "She's written to him. He knows." "Gid, did he tell you that?" Libby didn't think so. "Hey, why would she write to him? Why would she try to see him? Cresswell-White said she can't contact you guys. Her parole will be screwed up if she does. She's just spent twenty years in the joint, right? You think she wants to go back for three or four more? "He knows, Libby. And so do I." "Then what are we doing here? I mean, if you know .. ." Gideon was making less and less sense by the hour. She thought fleetingly of his psychiatrist. Libby knew the shrink's name, Dr. Something Rose, but that was all. She wondered if she should phone every Dr. Rose in the book -how many could there be?-and say, Look, I'm a friend of Gideon Davies. I'm getting freaked out. He's acting too weird. Can you help out? Did psychiatrists make house calls? And more to the point, did they take it seriously if a friend of a patient called and said it looked like things were getting out of hand? Or did they then think the friend of the patient should be the next patient? Shit. Hell. What should she do? Not call Richard, that's for sure. He wasn't exactly playing the role of Mr. Sympathy By The Bucketful. Gideon had dumped out each of the desk drawers on the floor and had done a thorough job of searching through their contents. The only thing left was a letter holder on top of the desk, which for some bizarre reason but by then, who was counting them?-he went for last, opening envelopes and throwing them onto the floor after glancing at their contents. But the fifth one he came to, he read. Libby could see it was a card with flowers on the front and a printed greeting inside along with a note. His hand dropped hard as he read the message. She thought, He's found it. She crossed the room to him. She said, "What? She, like, wrote to your dad?" He said, "Virginia." She said, "What? Who? Who's Virginia?" His shoulders shook and his fist grabbed onto the card like he wanted to strangle it and he said again, "Virginia. Virginia. God damn him. He lied to me." And he began to cry. Not tears but sobs, heaves of his body like everything was trying to come up and out of him: the contents of his stomach, the thoughts in his mind, and the feelings of his heart. Tentatively, Libby reached for the card. He let her take it from him and she ran her gaze over it, looking for what had caused Gideon's reaction. It said: Dear Richard, Thank you for the flowers. They were much appreciated. The ceremony was a brief one, but I tried to make it something Virginia herself would have liked. So I filled the chapel with her finger paintings and put her favourite toys round her coffin before the cremation. Our daughter was a miracle child in many ways, not only because she defied medical probability and lived thirty-two years but also because she managed to teach so much to anyone who came into contact with her. I think you would have been proud to be her father, Richard. Despite her problems, she had your tenacity and your fighting spirit, no poor gifts to pass on to a child. Fondly, Lynn Libby re-read the message and understood. She had your tenacity and your fighting spirit, no poor gifts to pass on to a child. Virginia, she thought. Another kid. Gideon had another sister and she was dead, too. She looked at Gideon, at a loss for what to say. He'd been taking so many body blows in the past few days that she couldn't even begin to think where to start with the psychic salve that might soothe him. She said hesitantly, "You didn't know about her, Gid?" And then, "Gideon?" again when he didn't reply. She reached out and touched his shoulder. He sat unmoving except for the fact that his whole frame was trembling. It was vibrating, almost, beneath his clothes. He said, "Dead." She said, "Yeah. I read that in the note. Lynn must've been .. . Well, obviously, she says "our daughter" so she was her mom. Which means your dad was married before and you had a half-sister as well. You didn't know?" He took the card back from her. He heaved himself off the chair and clumsily shoved the card back into its envelope, stuffing this into the back pocket of his trousers. He said in a voice that was low, like someone talking while hypnotised, "He lies to me about everything. He always has. And he's lying now." He walked through the litter he'd left on the floor, like a man without vision. Libby trailed him, saying, "Maybe he didn't lie at all," not so much because she wanted to defend Richard Davies who probably would have lied about the second coming of Christ if that was the way to get what he wanted but because she didn't want Gideon to have to deal with anything else. "I mean, if he never told you about Virginia, it wouldn't have necessarily been a lie. It might've just been one of those things that never came up. Like, maybe he never had the opportunity to talk about her or something. Maybe your mom didn't want her discussed. Too painful? All's I'm saying is that it doesn't have to mean ' "I knew," he said. "I've always known." He went into the kitchen with Libby on his heels, chewing on this one. If Gideon knew about Virginia, then what was with him? Freaked out because she'd died, too? Distraught because no one had told him she'd died? Outraged because he'd been kept from the funeral? Except it looked like Richard himself didn't go, if the note was an indication of anything. So what was the lie? She said, "Gid but stopped herself when he began punching numbers into the phone. Although he stood with one hand pressed to his stomach and one foot tapping against the floor, his expression was grim, the way a man looks when he's made up his mind about something. He said into the phone, "Jill? Gideon. I want to speak to Dad .. . No? Then where ...?... I'm at the flat. No, he's not here ... I checked there. Did he give you any idea.. . ?" A rather long pause while Richard's lover either wracked her brains or recited a list of possibilities at the end of which Gideon said, "Right. Mother Care Fine .. . Thanks, Jill," and listened some more. He ended with, "No. No message. No message at all. If he rings you, in fact, don't tell him I phoned. I wouldn't want to ... Right. Let's not worry him. He's got enough on his mind." Then he rang off. "She thinks he's gone off to Oxford Street. Supplies, she says. He wants an intercom for the baby's room. She hadn't yet got one because she intended the baby to sleep with them. Or with her. Or with him. Or with someone. But she didn't intend her to be alone. Because if a baby gets left alone, Libby, if a child goes untended for a while, if the parents aren't vigilant, if there's a distraction when they don't expect one, if there's a window open, if someone leaves a candle lit, if anything at all, then the worst can happen. The worst will happen. And who knows that better than Dad?" "Let's go," Libby said. "Let's get out of here, Gideon. Come on. I'll buy you a latte, okay? There's got to be a Starbucks nearby." He shook his head. "You go. Take the car. Go home." "I'm not going to leave you here. Besides, how would you get ' "I'll wait for Dad. He'll drive me back." "That could be hours. If he goes back to Jill's and she starts labour and then she has the baby, it could be days. Come on. I don't want to leave you hanging around this place alone." But she couldn't move him. He wouldn't have her there, and he wouldn't go with her. He would, however, speak to his father. "I don't care how long it takes," he told her. "This time, I don't really care at all." Reluctantly, then, she agreed to the plan, not liking it but also seeing that there wasn't much she could do about it. Besides, he seemed calmer after talking to Jill. Or at least he seemed moderately more himself. She said, "Will you call me, then, if you need anything?" "I won't be needing anything," he replied. Helen herself answered the door when Lynley knocked at Webberly's house in Stamford Brook. He said, "Helen, why are you still here? When Hillier told me you'd come over from the hospital, I couldn't believe it. You shouldn't be doing this." "Whyever not?" she asked in a perfectly reasonable voice. He stepped inside as Webberly's dog came bounding from the direction of the kitchen, barking at full volume. Lynley backed towards the door while Helen took the dog by the collar and said, "Alfie, no." She gave him a shake. "He doesn't sound like a friend, but he's quite all right. All bark and bluster." "So I noticed," Lynley said. She looked up from the animal. "Actually, I was talking about you." She released the Alsatian once he'd settled. The dog sniffed round Lynley's trouser turn-ups, accepted intrusion, and trotted back towards the kitchen. "Don't lecture me, darling," Helen said to her husband. "As you see, I have friends in high places." "With dangerous teeth." "That's true." She gave a nod to the door, and said, "I didn't think it would be you. I was hoping for Randie." "She still won't leave him?" "It's a stalemate. She won't leave her father; Frances won't leave the house. None of us have been able to move either of them. I thought when we got word about the heart attack .. . Surely, she'll want to go to him, I thought. She'll force herself. Because he may die and not to be there if he dies .. . But no." "It's not your problem, Helen. And considering the kinds of days you've been having .. . You need to get some rest. Where's Laura Hillier?" "She and Frances had a row. Frances more than Laura, actually. One of those don't-look-at-me-as-if-I-were-a-monster sort of conversations that start out with one party trying to convince the other party that she's not thinking what the other party is determined to believe she thinks she's thinking because at some level would that be subconsciously?-she actually is thinking it." Lynley tried to wade through all this, saying, "Are these waters too deep for me, Helen?" "They may require life belts." "I thought I might be of help." Helen had walked into the sitting room. There an ironing board had been set up and an iron was sending steam ceiling ward which told Lynley much to his astonishment that his wife was actually in the process of seeing to the family laundry. A shirt lay across the board itself, one arm the subject of Helen's most recent ministrations. From the look of the wrinkles that appeared to have been permanently applied to the garment, it seemed that Lynley's wife hadn't exactly found a new calling in life. She saw his glance and said, "Yes. Well. I'd hoped to be helpful." "It's brilliant of you. Really," Lynley replied supportively. "I'm not doing it properly. I can see that. I'm sure there's a logic to it -an order or something? but I've not yet worked it out. Sleeves first? Front? Back? Collar? I do one part and the other part which I've already done wrinkles up again. Can you advise?" "There must be a laundry nearby." "That's terrifically helpful, Tommy." Helen smiled ruefully. "Perhaps I should stick to pillowcases. At least they're flat." "Where's Frances?" "Darling, no. We can't possibly ask her to ' He chuckled. "That's not what I meant. I'd like to talk to her. Is she upstairs?" "Oh. Yes. Once she and Laura had their argument, it was tears all round. Laura dashed out, absolutely sobbing. Frances tore up the stairs looking grim-faced. When I checked on her, she was sitting on the floor in a corner of her bedroom, clutching onto the curtains. She asked to be left alone." "Randie needs to be with her. She needs to be with Randie." "Believe me, Tommy, I've made that point. Carefully, subtly, straightforwardly, respectfully, cajolingly, and every other way I could think of, save belligerently." "That could be what she needs. Bellicosity." "Tone might work although I doubt it but volume I guarantee will get you nowhere. She asks to be left alone each time I go up to see her and while I'd rather not leave her alone, I keep thinking I ought to respect her wishes." "Let me have a go, then." "I'll come as well. Have you any further news of Malcolm? We haven't had word from the hospital since Randie phoned, which is good, I suppose. Because surely Randie would have phoned at once if... Is there no change, Tommy?" "No change," Lynley said. "The heart complicates things. It's a waiting game." "Do you think they might they have to decide .. . ?" Helen paused on the staircase above him and looked back, reading in his expression the answer to her uncompleted question. "I'm so terribly sorry for all of them," she said. "For you as well. I do know what he means to you." "Frances needs to be there. Randie can't be asked to do it alone, if it comes to that." "Of course she can't," Helen said. Lynley had never been upstairs in Webberly's home, so he allowed his wife to show him the way to the master bedroom. The first floor of the house was dominated by scents: potpourri from bowls on a three-tier stand that they passed at the top of the stairs, orange spice from a candle burning outside the bathroom door, lemon from polish used on the furniture. But the scents were not strong enough to cover the stronger odour of air overheated, overweighed with cigar smoke, and so long stale that it seemed only rainfall violent and long within the walls of the house would be enough to cleanse it. "Every window is shut," Helen said quietly. "Well, of course, it's November so one wouldn't expect.. . But still... It must be so difficult for them. Not just for Malcolm and Randie. They can get away. But for Frances, because she must so want to be ... to be cured." "One would think," Lynley agreed. "Through here, Helen?" Only one of the doors was closed and Helen nodded when he indicated it. He tapped on its white panels and said, "Frances? It's Tommy. May I come in?" No reply. He called out again, a little louder this time, following that with another rap on the door. When she didn't respond, he tried the knob. It turned, so he eased the door open. Behind him, Helen said, "Frances? Will you see Tommy?" To which Webberly's wife finally said, "Yes," in a voice that was neither fearful nor resentful at the intrusion, just quiet and tired. They found her not in the corner where Helen last had seen her but sitting on an undecorated straight-backed chair that she'd drawn up to look at her reflection in a mirror above the dressing table. On the table, she'd laid out hair brushes, hair slides, and ribbons. She was running two ribbons through her fingers as they entered, as if studying the effect that their colour had against her skin. She was undoubtedly wearing, Lynley saw, what she'd been wearing when she'd phoned her daughter on the previous night. She had on a quilted pink dressing gown belted at the waist, and an azure nightdress beneath it. She hadn't combed her hair despite the brushes laid out before her, so it was still asymmetrically flattened by her head's pressure into her pillow, as if an invisible hat were perched on it. She looked so colourless that Lynley thought at once of spirits despite the hour of the day: gin, brandy, whisky, vodka, or anything else to bring some blood to her face. He said to Helen, "Would you bring up a drink, darling?" And to Webberly's wife, "Frances, you could do with a brandy. I'd like you to have one." She said, "Yes. All right. A brandy." Helen left them. Lynley saw a linen chest extended across the foot of the bed and he dragged this over to where Frances sat so that he could speak at her level rather than down at her like alec turing uncle. He didn't know where to begin. He didn't know what would do any good. Considering the length of time that Frances Webberly had spent inside the walls of this house, paralysed by inexplicable terrors, it didn't seem likely that a simple declaration of her husband's peril and her daughter's need could convince her that her fears were groundless. He was wise enough to know that the human mind did not work that way. Common logic did not suffice to obliterate demons that lived within the tortuous caves of a woman's psyche. He said, "Can I do anything, Frances? I know you want to go to him." She'd raised one of the ribbons against her cheek, and she lowered this slowly to the top of the table. "Do you know that," she said, not a question but a statement. "If I had the heart of a woman who knows how to love her husband properly, I would have gone to him already. Directly they phoned from casualty. Directly they said, "Is this Mrs. Webberly? We're phoning you from Charing Cross Hospital. Casualty. Is this a relative of Malcolm Webberly that I'm speaking to?" I would have gone. I wouldn't have waited to hear a word more. No woman who loves her husband would have done that. No real woman no adequate woman would have said, "What's happened? Oh God. Why's he not here? Please tell me. The dog came home but Malcolm wasn't with him and he's left me, hasn't he? He's left me, he's left me at last." And they said, "Mrs. Webberly, your husband's alive. But we would like to speak to you. Here, Mrs. Webberly. Can we send a taxi for you? Is there someone who can bring you down to the hospital?" And that was good of them, wasn't it, to pretend like that? To ignore what I'd said. But when they rang off, they said, "We've got a real nutter here. Poor bloke, this Webberly. No wonder the old sod was out on the streets. Probably threw himself in front of the car." Her fingers curled round a navy ribbon, and her nails sank into it, making gullies in the satin. Lynley said, "In the middle of the night when you have a shock, you don't weigh your words, Frances. Nurses, doctors, orderlies, and everyone else at a hospital would know that." ' "He's your husband," she said. "He's cared for you all these miserable years and you owe this to him. And to Miranda. Frances, you owe it to her. You must pull yourself together because if you don't and if something should happen to Malcolm while you're not there .. . and if, God, if he should actually die... Get up, get up, get up Frances Louise because you and I know there is nothing God help me nothing at all that's wrong with you. The spotlight's off you. Accept that fact." As if she knew what it's like. As if she's actually spent time in my world, in this world, right inside here Savagely, she rapped her temple 'instead of in her own little space where everything's perfect, always has been, always will be world without end amen. But it's not like that for me. That is not how it is." "Of course," Lynley said. "We all look at the world through the prisms of our own experiences, don't we? But sometimes in a moment of crisis, people forget that. So they say things and do things.. . It's all for an end that everyone wants but no one knows how to reach. How can I help you?" Helen came back into the room then, a wine glass in her hand. It was half-filled with brandy and she placed it on the dressing table and looked towards Lynley with "What now?" on her face. He wished he knew. He had very little doubt that with every decent intention in the world Frances's sister had already run through the repertoire. Certainly, Laura Hillier had tried reasoning with Frances first, manipulating her second, inducing guilt in her third, and uttering threats fourth. What was probably needed a slow process of getting the poor woman once again used to an external environment of which she'd been terrified for years -was something that none of them could manage and something for which they had no time. What now? Lynley wondered along with his wife. A miracle, Helen. He said, "Drink some of this, Frances," and lifted the glass for her. When she'd done so, he laid his hand on hers. He said, "What exactly have they told you about Malcolm?" Frances murmured, "The doctors want to speak to you," she said. "You must go to the hospital. You must be with him. You must be with Randie." For the first time, Frances moved her gaze from her reflection. She looked at the joining of her hand with Lynley's. She said, "If Randie's with him, that's nearly all he would want. "What a brave, new world that's been given to us," he said when she was born. That's why he said she'd be called Miranda. And she was perfect to him. Every way perfect. Perfect as I couldn't hope to be. Ever. Not ever. Daddy's got a princess." She reached for the wine glass where Lynley had placed it. She started to pick it up but stopped herself and said, "No. No. That's not it. Not a princess. Not at all. Daddy's found a queen." Her eyes remained motionless, on the brandy in the glass, but their rims slowly reddened as tears pooled against them. Lynley's glance met Helen's where she stood just beyond Frances's right shoulder. He could read her reaction to this and he knew it matched his own. Escape was called for. To be in the presence of a maternal jealousy so strong that it wouldn't loosen its grip upon someone even in the midst of a life-and-death crisis ... It was more than disconcerting, Lynley thought. It was obscene. He felt like a voyeur. Helen said, "If Malcolm's anything at all like my father, Frances, I expect what he's felt is a special responsibility towards Randie, because she's a daughter and not a son." To which Lynley added, "I saw that in my own family. The way my father was with my older sister wasn't in the least the way he was with me. Or with my younger brother, for that matter. We weren't as vulnerable, in his eyes. We needed toughening up. But I think what all that means is ' Frances moved the hand that had been beneath his. She said, "No. They're right. What they're thinking at the hospital. The queen is dead and he can't cope now. He threw himself under that car last night." Then for the first time she looked directly at Lynley. She said it again, "The queen is finally dead. There's no one to replace her. Certainly not me." And Lynley suddenly understood. He said, "You knew," as Helen began to say, "Frances, you must never believe ', but Frances stopped her by getting to her feet. She went to one of the two bedside tables, and she opened its drawer and set it on the bed. From the very back, tucked away as far as possible from the other contents, she took a small, white square of linen. She unfolded it like a priest in a ritual, shaking it first then smoothing it out against the counterpane on the bed. Lynley joined her there. Helen did likewise. The three of them looked down on what was a handkerchief, ordinary save for two details: In one corner were twined the intitials E and D, and directly in the centre of the material lay a rusty smear which described a little drama from the past. He cuts his finger his palm the back of his hand doing something for her .. . sawing a board pounding a nail drying a glass picking up the pieces of a jar accidentally smashed on the floor .. . and she quickly removes a handkerchief from her pocket her handbag the sleeve of her sweater the cup of her bra and she presses it upon him because he never remembers to carry one himself. This piece of linen finds its way into the pocket of his trousers his jacket the breast of his coat where he forgets about it till his wife preparing the laundry the dry cleaning the sorting of old things to go to Oxfam finds it sees it knows it for what it is and keeps it. For how many years? Lynley wondered. For how many blasted God awful years in which she asked nothing about what it meant, giving her husband the opportunity to tell the truth, whatever that truth was, or to lie, fabricating a reason that might have been perfectly believable or at least something that she could cling to in order to lie to herself. Helen said, "Frances, will you let me get rid of this?" and she placed her fingers not on the handkerchief itself but right next to it, as if it were a relic and she a novitiate in some obscure religion in which only the ordained could touch the blessed. Frances said, "No!" and grabbed it. "He loved her," she said. "He loved her and I knew it. I saw it happening, as if it was a study of the whole process of love being played out in front of me. Like a television drama. And I kept waiting, you see, because right from the first I knew how he felt. He had to talk about it, he said. Because of Randie .. . because these poor people had lost a little girl not so much younger than our own Randie, and he could see how horrible it was for them, how much they suffered, especially the mother and "No one seems to want to talk to her about it, Frances. She has no one. She's existing in a bubble of grief- no, an infected boil of grief- and not one of them is trying to lance it. It feels inhuman, Frances, inhuman. Someone must help her before she breaks." So he decided to be the one. He would put that killer in gaol, by God, and he would not rest, Frances dear, till he had that killer signed, sealed, and delivered to justice. Because how would we feel if someone God forbid harmed our Randie? We would stay up nights, wouldn't we, we would search the streets, we would not sleep and we would not eat and we would not even darken our own doorstep for days on end if that's what it took to find the monster that hurt her." Lynley released a slow breath, realising that he'd been holding it the entire time that Frances had been speaking. He felt so far out of his depth that drowning looked like the only option. He glanced at his wife for some sort of guidance and saw that she'd raised her fingers to her lips. And he knew it was sorrow that Helen felt, sorrow for the words that had gone too long unspoken between the Webberlys. He found himself wondering what was actually worse: years of enduring the iron maiden of imagining or seconds of experiencing the quick death of knowing. Helen said, "Frances, If Malcolm hadn't loved you ' "Duty." Frances began to refold the handkerchief carefully. She said nothing more. Lynley said, "I think that's part of love, Frances. It's not the easy part. It's not that first rush of excitement: wanting and believing something's been written in the stars and aren't we the lucky ones because we've just looked heavenwards and got the message. It's the part that's the choice to stay the course." "I gave him no choice," Frances said. "Frances," Helen murmured, and Lynley could tell from her voice just exactly how much her next words cost her, 'believe me when I say that you don't have that power." Frances looked at Helen then, but of course could not see beyond the structure that Helen had built to live in the world she'd long ago created for herself: the fashionable haircut, the carefully tended and unblemished skin, the manicured hands, the perfect slim body weekly massaged, in the clothes designed for women who knew what elegance meant and how to use it. But as to seeing Helen herself, as to knowing her as the woman who'd once taken the quickest route out of the life of a man she'd dearly loved because she could not cope with staying a course that had altered too radically for her resources and her liking .. . Frances Webberly did not know that Helen and thus could not know that no one understood better than Helen that one person's condition mental, spiritual, psychological, social, emotional, physical or any combination thereof could never really control the choices another person made. Lynley said, "You need to know this, Frances. Malcolm didn't throw himself under that car. Eric Leach phoned him to tell him about Eugenie Davies, yes, and I expect you read about her death in the paper." "He was distraught. I thought he'd forgotten about her and then I knew he hadn't. All these years." "Not forgotten her, true," Lynley said, 'but not for the reasons you think. Frances, we don't forget. We can't forget. We don't walk away untouched when we hand our documents to the CPS. It doesn't work that way. But the fact of our remembering is just that, because that's what the mind does. It just remembers. And if we're lucky, the remembering doesn't turn into nightmares. But that's the best we can hope for. That's part of the job." Lynley knew he was walking a fine line between truth and falsehood. He knew that whatever Webberly had experienced in his affair with Eugenie Davies and in the years that had followed that affair probably went far beyond mere memory. But that couldn't be allowed to matter at the moment. All that mattered was that the man's wife understand one part of the last forty-eight hours. So he repeated that part for her, "Frances, he didn't throw himself into the traffic. He was hit by a car. He was hit deliberately. Someone tried to kill him. And within the next few hours or days, we're going to know if that someone succeeded because he may die. He's had a serious heart attack as well. You've been told that, haven't you?" A sound escaped her. It was something between the excruciating groan of a woman giving birth and the fearful moan of an abandoned child. "I don't want Malcolm to die," she said. "I'm so afraid." "You're not alone in that," Lynley replied. The fact that she had an appointment at a woman's shelter was what kept Yasmin Edwards steady between the time she phoned the pager number on Constable Nkata's card and the time she was able to meet him at the shop. He'd said he'd have to drive down from Hampstead to see her so he couldn't swear what time he'd get there but he would come as soon as possible, madam, and in the meantime if she began to worry that he wasn't coming at all or he'd forgotten or had got waylaid in some way, she could ring his pager again and he'd let her know where he was on the route, if that would suit her. She'd said she could come to him or meet him somewhere. She said, in fact, she'd prefer it that way. He'd said no, it was best that he come to her. She'd nearly changed her mind then. But she thought about Number Fifty-five, about Katja's mouth closing over hers, about what it meant that Katja could still slide down and down and down to love her. And she said, "Right. I'll be at the shop, then." In the meantime, she kept her appointment at the shelter in Camberwell. Three sisters in their thirties, an Asian lady, and an old bag married for forty-six years were the residents. Among them were shared countless bruises along with two black eyes, four split lips, a stitched-up cheek, a broken wrist, one dislocated shoulder, and a perforated eardrum. They were like beaten dogs recently let off the chain: cowering and undecided between flight and attack. Do not let any one do this to you, Yasmin wanted to shout at the women. The only thing that kept her from shouting was the scar on her own face and her badly set nose, both of which told the tale of what she herself had once allowed to be done to her. So she flashed them a smile, said, "C'mon over here, you gorgeous tomatoes." She spent two hours at the women's shelter, with her make-up and her colour swatches, with her scarves, her scents, and her wigs. And when she finally left them, three of the residents had got used to smiling again, the fourth had actually managed a laugh, and the fifth had begun to raise her eyes from the floor. Yasmin considered it a good day's work. She returned to the shop. When she arrived, the cop was striding up and down in front of it. She saw him check his watch and try to peer round the metal security door that she lowered over the shop front whenever she wasn't there. Then he looked at his watch again and took his beeper from his leather belt and tapped it. Yasmin pulled up in the old Fiesta. When she opened her door, the detective was there before she put a foot on the pavement. "This some kind of joke?" he demanded. "You think messing in a murder Vestigation's something you can have fun with, Missus Edwards?" "You said you didn't know how long Yasmin stopped herself. What was she making excuses for? She said, "I had a 'pointment. You want to help me unload the car or you want to chew my bum?" She thrust out her chin as she spoke, only hearing her final words for their double meaning after she'd said them. Then she wouldn't give him the pleasure of her embarrassment. She faced him squarely tall woman, tall man and waited for him to go for the crude. Hey, baby, I'll chew on more'n your bum, you give me the chance. But he didn't do that. Wordlessly, he went to the Fiesta's hatch back and waited for her to come round and unlock it. She did so. She shoved her cardboard box of supplies into his arms and topped it with the case of lotions, make-up, and brushes. Then she smacked the hatch of the Fiesta closed and strode to the shop, where she unlocked the metal door and yanked it upwards, using her shoulder against it as she usually did when it stuck midway. He said, "Hang on," and put his burdens on the ground. Before she could stop it from happening, his hands broad and flat and black with pale oval nails neatly trimmed to the tips of his fingers planted themselves on either side of her. He heaved upwards as she pushed, and with a sound like eeeerrreeek of metal on metal, the door gave way. He stayed where he was, right behind her, too close by half, and said, "That needs seeing to. "Fore much longer, you won't be able to slide it at all." She said, "I c'n cope," and she grabbed up the metal box of her make-up because she wanted to be doing something and because she wanted him to know she could manage the supplies, the door, and the shop itself just fine on her own. But once inside, it was like before. He seemed to fill the place. He seemed to make it his. And that irritated her, especially since he did nothing at all to give the impression that he meant to intimidate or at least to dominate. He merely set the cardboard box onto the counter, saying gravely, "I wasted nearly an hour waiting for you, Missus Edwards. I hope you 'ntend to make it worth my while now you're finally here." "You getting nothing-' She swung round. She'd been putting away her make-up case as he spoke, and her reaction was reflex, pure as the bell and those Russian dogs. Now don't go playing Miss Ice Cubes, Yas. Girl got blessed with a body like yours, she need to use it to her bes' a vantage. So You getting nothing off me was what she'd intended to hurl at the cop. No kiss-and-don't-tell by the airing cupboard, no grope in the lap at the dinner table, no peeling back blouses and easing down trousers and no no no hands separating rigid legs. Come on, Yas. Don't fight me on this. She felt her face freeze. He was watching her. She saw his gaze on her mouth, and she watched it travel to her nose. She was marked by what went for love from a man and he read those marks and she would never be able to forget it. He said, "Missus Edwards," and she hated the sound and she wondered why she'd kept Roger's name. She'd told herself she'd done it for Daniel, mother and son tied together by a name when they couldn't be tied by anything else. But now she wondered if she'd really done it to flay herself, not as a constant reminder of the fact that she'd killed her husband but as a way of doing penance for having hooked up with him in the first place. She'd loved him, yes. But she'd soon learned that there was nothing whatsoever to be gained from loving. Still, the lesson hadn't stuck, had it? For she'd loved again and look where she was now: facing down a cop who would see this time the very same killer but an entirely different sort of corpse. "You had something to tell me." DC Winston Nkata reached into the pocket of the jacket that fit him hand-to-a-leather-glove, and he brought out a notebook, the same one he'd been writing in before, with the same propelling pencil clipped to it. Seeing this, Yasmin thought of the lies he'd already recorded and how bad it was going to be for her if she decided to clean house now. And the image of cleaning house opened her mind to the rest of it: how people could look on a person and because of her face, her speech, and the way she decided to carry herself, how people could reach a conclusion about her and cling to it in the face of all evidence to the contrary and why? Because people were just so desperate to believe. Yasmin said, "She wasn't at home. We weren't watching the telly. She wasn't there." She saw the detective's chest slowly deflate, as if he'd been holding his breath since the moment he'd arrived, betting against his own respiration that Yasmin Edwards had paged him that morning with the express intention of betraying her lover. "Where was she?" he asked. "She tell you, Missus Edwards? What time d'she get home?" "Twelve-forty-one." He nodded. He wrote steadily and tried to look cool but Yasmin could see it all happening in his head. He was doing the maths. He was matching the maths to Katja's lies. And underneath that, he was celebrating the fact that his gamble had won him the jack pot he'd bet for. Chapter Twenty-One Her final words to him were, "And let's not forget, Eric. You wanted the divorce. So if you can't cope with the fact that I've got Jerry now, don't let's pretend it's Esme's problem." And she'd looked so flaming triumphant about it all, so filled with look-at-me-I've-found-someone-who-actually-wants-me-boyo that Leach found himself cursing his twelve-year-old daughter God forgive him for being capable of manipulating him into talking to her mother in the first place. "I've got a right to see other people," Bridget had asserted. "You were the one who gave it to me." "Look, Bridg," he'd said. "It's not that I'm jealous. It's that Esme's in a state because she thinks you'll remarry." "I intend to remarry. I want to remarry." "All right. Fine. But she thinks you've already chosen this bloke and ' "What if I have? What if I've decided it feels good to be wanted? To be with a man who doesn't have a thing about breasts that droop a bit and lines of character on my face. That's what he calls them by the way, Eric, lines of character." "This is on the rebound," Leach tried to tell her. "Do not inform me what this is. Or we'll get into what your behaviour is: mid life idiocy, extended immaturity, adolescent stupidity. Shall I go on? No? Right. I didn't think so." And she turned on her heel and left him. She returned to her classroom in the primary school where ten minutes before Leach had motioned to her from the doorway, having dutifully stopped to speak to the head teacher first, asking if he could have a word, please, with Mrs. Leach. The head teacher had remarked how irregular it was that a parent should come calling on one of the teachers in the midst of the school day, but when Leach had introduced himself to her, she'd become simultaneously cooperative and compassionate, which told Leach that the word was out not only about the pending divorce but also about Bridget's new love interest. He felt like saying, "Hey. I don't give a toss that she's got a new bloke," but he wasn't so sure that was the case. Nonetheless, the fact of the new bloke at least allowed him to feel less guilty about being the one who'd wanted to separate and, as his wife stalked off, he tried to keep his mind fixed on that. He said, "Bridg, listen. I'm sorry," to her retreating back, but he didn't say it very loudly, he knew she hadn't heard him, and he wasn't sure what he was apologising about anyway. Still, as he watched her retreat, he did feel the blow to his pride. So he tried to obliterate his regrets about how they'd parted, and he told himself he'd done the right thing. Considering how quickly she'd managed to replace him, there wasn't much doubt their marriage had been dead long before he'd first mentioned the fact. Yet he couldn't help thinking that some couples managed to stay the course no matter what happened to their feelings for each other. Indeed, some couples swore that they were 'absolutely desperate to grow together' when all the time the only real glue that kept them adhered to each other was a bank account, a piece of property, shared offspring, and an unwillingness to divide up the furniture and the Christmas decorations. Leach knew men on the force who were married to women they'd loathed forever. But the very thought of putting their children, their possessions not to mention their pensions at risk had kept them polishing their wedding rings for years. Which thought led Leach ineluctably to Malcolm Webberly. Leach had known that something was up from the phone calls, from the notes scribbled, shoved into envelopes, and posted, from the oft distracted manner in which Webberly engaged in a conversation. He'd had his suspicions. But he'd been able to discount them because he hadn't known for certain till he saw them together, seven years after the case itself when quite by chance he and Bridget had taken the kids to the Regatta because Curtis'd had a project at school The Culture and Traditions of Our Country .. . Jesus .. . Leach even remembered the bloody name of it! and there they were, the two of them, standing on that bridge that crossed the Thames into Henley, his arm round her waist and the sunlight on them both. He didn't know who she was at first, didn't remember her, saw only that she was good looking and that they comprised that unit which calls itself In Love. How odd, Leach thought now, to recall what he'd felt at the sight of Webberly and his Lady Friend. He realised that he'd never considered his superior officer a real breathing man before that moment. He realised that he'd seen Webberly in rather the same manner as a child sees a much older adult. And the sudden knowledge that Webberly had a secret life felt like the blow an eight year old would take should he walk in on his dad in flagrante with a neighbour. And she'd looked like that, the woman on the bridge, as familiar as a neighbour. In fact, she looked so familiar that for a time Leach expected to see her at work perhaps a secretary he'd not yet met? or maybe emerging from an office in the Earl's Court Road. He'd reckoned that she was just someone Webberly had happened to meet, happened to strike up a conversation with, happened to discover an attraction to, happened to say to himself "Oh, why not, Male? No need to be such a bloody Puritan," about. Leach couldn't remember when or how he'd sussed out that Webberly's lover was Eugenie Davies. But when he had done, he hadn't been able to keep mum any longer. He'd used his outrage as an excuse for speaking, no little boy fearful that Dad would leave home again but a full grown adult who knew right from wrong. My God, he'd thought, that an officer from the murder squad that his own partner should cross the line like that, should take the opportunity to gratify himself with someone who'd been traumatised, victimised, and brutal-ised both by tragic events and the aftermath of those events ... It was inconceivable. Webberly had been, if not deaf to the subject, at least willing to hear him out. He hadn't made a comment at all till Leach had recited every stanza of the ode to Webberly's unprofessional conduct that he'd been composing. Then he'd said, "What the hell do you think of me, Eric? It wasn't like that. This didn't start during the case. I hadn't seen her for years when we began to ... Not till ... It was at Paddington Station. Completely by chance. We spoke there for ten minutes or less, between trains. Then later.. . Hell. Why am I explaining this? If you think I'm out of order, put yourself up for transfer." But he hadn't wanted that. Why? he asked himself. Because of what Malcolm Webberly had become to him. How our pasts define our presents, Leach thought now. We're not even aware that it's happening, but every time we reach a conclusion, make a judgement, or take a decision, the years of our lives are stacked up behind us: all those dominoes of influence that we don't begin to acknowledge as part of defining who we are. He drove to Hammersmith. He told himself he needed a few minutes to decompress from the scene with Bridget, and he did his decompressing in the car, wending his way south till he was in striking distance of Charing Cross Hospital. So he finished the journey and located intensive care. He couldn't get in to see him, he was told by the sister in charge when he walked through the swinging doors. Only family were allowed in to see the patients in the I.C.U. Was he a member of the Webberly family? Oh yes, he thought. And of long standing, although he'd never truly admitted that to himself and Webberly hadn't ever twigged the idea. But what he said was, "No. Just another officer. The superintendent and I used to work together." The nurse nodded. She remarked how good it was that so many members of the Met had stopped by, had phoned, had sent flowers, and had stood by with offers of blood for the patient. "Type B," she said to him. "Do you happen to be .. . ? Or O, which is universal, but I expect you know that." "AB negative." "That's very rare. We wouldn't be able to use it in this case, but you ought to be a regular donor, if you don't mind my saying." "Is there anything .. . ?" He nodded in the direction of the rooms. "His daughter's with him. His brother-in-law as well. There's really nothing .. . But he's holding his own." "Still hooked up to the machines?" She looked regretful. "I'm awfully sorry. I can't exactly give out... I do hope you understand. But if I may ask .. . Do you pray .. . ?" "Not regularly." "Sometimes it helps." But there was something more useful than prayer, Leach thought. Like cracking the whip over the murder team and at least making progress towards finding the bastard who did this to Malcolm. And he could do that. He was about to nod a goodbye to the nurse when a young woman wearing a track suit and untied trainers emerged from one of the rooms. The nurse called her over, saying, "This gentleman's asking after your dad." Leach hadn't seen Miranda Webberly since her childhood, but he saw now that she'd grown up to look very much like her father: same stout body, same rust-coloured hair, same ruddy complexion, same smile that crinkled round her eyes and produced a single dimple on her left cheek. She looked like the sort of young woman who didn't bother with fashion magazines and he liked her for that. She spoke quietly about her father's condition: that he hadn't regained consciousness, that there'd been 'a rather serious crisis with his heart' earlier that day but now he had stabilised thank God, that his blood count "I think it was the white cells? But maybe the other .. . ?" indicated a point of internal bleeding that they were going to have to locate soon since right now they were tranfusing him but that would be a waste of blood if he was losing it from somewhere inside. "They say he can hear, even in a coma, so I've been reading to him," Miranda confided. "I hadn't thought to bring anything from Cambridge, so Uncle David went out and bought a book about narrow boating. I think it's the first thing that came to hand. But it's terribly dull and I'm afraid it'll send me into a coma before much longer. And I can't think it'll make Dad wake up because he's longing to hear how things turn out. Of course, he's in a coma mostly because they want him a coma. At least, that's what they're telling me." She seemed eager to make Leach feel comfortable, to let him know how much his pathetic effort to be of help was appreciated. She looked exhausted, but she was calm, with no apparent expectation that someone other than herself- should rescue her from the situation in which she was involved. He liked her more. He said, "Is there someone who could take over from you here? Give you a chance to get home for a bath? An hour's kip?" "Oh, yes, of course," she said and she fished in her track suit top and brought out a rubber band that she used to discipline her steel wool hair. "But I want to be here. He's my dad, and... He can hear me, you see. He knows I'm with him. And if that's a help ... I mean, it's important that someone going through what he's going through know he's not alone, don't you think?" Which implied that Webberly's wife wasn't with him. Which suggested a volume or two of what the years had been like since Webberly had made his decision not to leave Frances for Eugenie. They'd talked about it the single time that Leach himself had brought up the subject. He couldn't remember now why he'd felt compelled to venture into such a private area of another man's life, but something had happened a veiled remark? a phone conversation with a subtext of hostility on Webberly's part? a departmental party to which Webberly had shown up alone for the dozenth time? and that something had prompted Leach to say, "I don't see how you can act the lover of one and be the lover of the other. You could leave Frances, Male. You know that. You've got someplace to go." Webberly hadn't responded at first. Indeed, he hadn't responded for days. Leach thought he might never respond at all till two weeks later when Webberly's car was in for repair and Leach had dropped him off at his home because it was not so far out of his way. Half past seven in the evening, and she was in her pyjamas when she came to the door and flung it open, crowing, "Daddy! Daddy! Daddy!" and dashing down the path to be caught up in her father's arms. Webberly had buried his face in her crinkly hair, had blown noisy kisses against her neck, had elicited more crows of joy from her. "This is my Randie," he'd said to Leach. "This is why." Leach said to Miranda now, "Your mum's not here, then? Gone home for a rest has she?" She said, "I'll tell her you were here, Inspector. She'll be so glad to know. Everyone's been so ... so decent. Really." And she shook his hand and said that she would get back to her dad. "If there's something I can do .. . ?" "You've done it," she assured him. But on the way back to the Hampstead station, Leach didn't feel that way. And once inside, he began pacing round the incident room as he reviewed one report after another, most of which he'd already read. He said to the WPC on the computer, "So what's Swansea given us?" She shook her head. "Every car owned by every principal's a late model, sir. There's nothing earlier than ten years old." "Who owns that one?" She referred to a clipboard, ran her finger down the page. "Robson," she said. "Raphael. He's got a Renault. Colour is ... let me see .. . silver." "Blast. There's got to be something." Leach considered another way to approach the problem. He said, "Significant others. Go there." She said, "Sir?" "Go through the reports. Get all the names. Wives, husbands, boyfriends, girlfriends, teenagers who drive, flat mates anyone and everyone connected to this who has a driving licence. Run their names through the DVLA and see if any of them have a car that fits our profile." "All of them, sir?" the constable said. "I believe we speak the same language, Vanessa." She sighed, said, "Yes, sir," and returned to work as one of the newer constables came barrelling into the room. He was called Solberg, a wet-behind-the-ears DC who'd been eager to prove himself from day one on the murder squad. He was trailing a sheaf of paperwork behind him, and his face was so red, he looked like a runner at the end of a marathon. He cried out, "Guv! Check this out. Ten days ago, and it's hot. It's hot." Leach said, "What're you on about, Solberg?" "A bit of a complication," he replied. Nkata decided to turn to Katja Wolff s solicitor after his conversation with Yasmin Edwards. She'd said, "You got what you want, now get out, Constable' once she'd watched him write 12:41 in his notebook, and she'd refused to speculate on where her lover had been on the night Eugenie Davies had died. He'd thought about pushing her You lied once, madam, so what's to say you aren't lying again and do you know what happens to lags who get ticks by their names as accessories to murder? but he hadn't done so. He hadn't had the heart, because he'd seen the emotions running across her face while he was questioning her, and he had an idea of how much it had cost her to tell him the little she'd already told. Still, he'd not been able to stop himself from considering what would happen if he asked her why: Why was she betraying her lover and, more important, what was the significance of that betrayal? But that wasn't his business, was it? It couldn't be his business because he was a copper and she was a lag. And that's the way it was. So he'd closed his notebook. He'd intended to turn on his heel and get out of her shop with a simple yet pointed, "Cheers, Missus Edwards. You did the right thing." But he didn't say that. Instead what he'd said was, "You all right, Missus Edwards?" and found himself taken aback at the gentleness he felt. It was wrong as hell to feel gentle towards such a woman in such a situation, and when she said, "Just get out," he took the course of wisdom and did just that. In his car, he'd slipped from his wallet the card that Katja Wolff had handed him early that morning. He'd removed the A to Z from his glove compartment and looked up the street in which Harriet Lewis had her office. As luck would have it, the solicitor's office was in Kentish Town, which meant the other side of the river and yet another drive through London. But wending his way there gave him time to plan an approach likely to dislodge information from the lawyer. And he knew he needed a decent approach because the proximity of her office to HM Prison Holloway suggested that Harriet Lewis had more than one villain as a client, which suggested in turn that she wasn't likely to be easily finessed into revealing anything. When at last he pulled to the kerb, Nkata discovered that Harriet Lewis had set herself up in humble offices between a news agent and a grocery displaying limp broccoli and bruised cauliflower out on the pavement. A door was set at an oblique angle to the street, abutting the door to the news agent and on its upper half of translucent glass was printed Solicitors and nothing more. Directly inside, a staircase covered in thinning red carpet led up to two doors which faced each other on a landing. One of the doors was open, revealing an empty room with another adjoining it and a wide-planked wooden floor frosted with dust. The other door was closed, and a business card was tacked to the panels with a drawing pin. Nkata scrutinised this card and found it identical to the one Katja Wolff had given to him. He lifted it with the edge of his fingernail and looked beneath it. There was no other card. Nkata smiled. He had the opening he wanted. He entered without knocking and found himself in a reception room as unlike the neighbourhood, the immediate environment, and the suite across the landing as he could have imagined. A Persian rug covered most of the polished floor, and on it sat a reception desk, sofa, chairs, and tables of a severely modern design. They were all sharp edges, wood, and leather and they should have argued with not only the rug, but also the wainscoting and the wallpaper, but instead they suggested just the right degree of daring one would hope for when one hired a solicitor. "May I help you?" The question came from a middle-aged woman who sat at the desk in front of a keyboard and monitor, wearing tiny earphones from which she appeared to have been taking dictation. She was done up in professional navy-and-cream, her hair short and neat and just beginning to grey in a streak that wove back from above her left temple. She had the darkest eyebrows Nkata had ever seen, and in a world in which he was used to being looked at with suspicion by white women, he'd never encountered a more hostile stare. He produced his identification and asked to speak to the solicitor. He didn't have an appointment, he told Mrs. Eyebrows before she could ask, but he expected Miss Lewis "Ms Lewis," the receptionist said, removing her earphones and setting them aside. would see him once she was told he was calling about Katja Wolff. He laid his card on the desk and added, "Pass that to her if you like. Tell her we talked on the 'phone this morning. I 'xpect she'll remember." Mrs. Eyebrows made a point of not touching the card till Nkata's fingers had left it. Then she picked it up, saying, "Wait here, please," and went through to the inner office. She came out perhaps two minutes later and repositioned the earphones on her head. She resumed her typing without a glance in his direction, which might have caused his blood to start heating had he not learned early in life to take white women's behaviour for what it usually was: obvious and ignorant as hell. So he studied the pictures on the walls old black and white head shots of women that put him in mind of days when the British Empire stretched round the globe and when he was done inspecting these, he picked up a copy of Ms from America and engrossed himself in an article about alternatives to hysterectomies that seemed to be written by a woman who was balancing on her shoulder a chip the size of the Blidworth Boulder. He did not sit, and when Mrs. Eyebrows said to him meaningfully, "It will be a while, Constable, as you've come without an appointment," he said, "Murder's like that, in't it? Never does let you know when it's coming." And he leaned his shoulder against the pale striped wallpaper and gave it a smack with the palm of his hand, saying, "Very nice, this is. What d'you call the design?" He could see the receptionist eyeing the spot he'd touched, looking for grease marks. She made no reply. He nodded at her pleasantly, snapped his magazine more fully open, and rested his head against the wall. "We've a sofa, Constable," Mrs. Eyebrows said. "Been sitting all day," he told her and added, "Piles," with a grimace for good measure. That appeared to do it. She got to her feet, disappeared into the inner office once again, and returned in a minute. She was bearing a tray with the remains of afternoon tea on it, and she said that the solicitor was ready to see him now. Nkata smiled to himself. He bet she was. Harriet Lewis, dressed in black as she had been on the previous evening, was standing behind her desk when he entered. She said, "We've had our conversation already, Constable Nkata. Am I going to have to ring for counsel?" "You feeling the need?" Nkata asked her. "Woman like you, 'fraid to go it alone?" ' "Woman like me," she mimicked, 'no bloody fool. I spend my life telling clients to keep their mouths shut in the presence of the police. I'd be fairly stupid not to heed my own advice, now wouldn't I?" "You'd be stupider ' "More stupid," she said. stupider," he repeated, 'to find yourself dis'tangling your way out of a charge of obstruction in a police inquiry." "You've charged no one with anything. You haven't aleg to stand on." "Day's not over." "Don't threaten me." "Make your phone call, then," Nkata told her. He looked round and saw that a seating area of three chairs and a coffee table had been fashioned at one end of the room. He sauntered over, sat down, and said, "Ah. Whew. Nice to take a load off at the end of the day," and nodded at her telephone. "Go ahead. I got the time to wait. My mum's a fine cook and she'll keep dinner warm." "What's this about, Constable? We've already spoken. I have nothing to add to what I've already told you." "Don't have a partner, I notice," he said," 'less she's hiding under your desk." "I don't believe I said there was a partner. You made that assumption." "Based on Katja Wolff s lie. Number Fifty-five Galveston Road, Miss Lewis. Care to speculate with me on that topic? Tha's where your partner's s'posed to live, by the way." "My relationship with my client is privileged." "Right. You got a client there, then?" "I didn't say that." Nkataleaned forward, elbows on knees. He said, "Listen to what I say, then." He looked at his watch. "Seventy-seven minutes ago Katja Wolff lost her alibi for the time of a hit and run in West Hampstead. You got that straight? And losing that alibi sends her straight to the top of the class. My experience, people don't lie 'bout where they were the night someone goes down 'less they got a good reason. This case, the reason looks like she was involved. Woman who was killed ' "I know who was killed," the solicitor snapped. "Do you? Good. Then you also proba'ly know that your client might Ve had an axe she wanted to grind with that individual." "That idea's laughable. If anything, the complete opposite is the truth." "Katja Wolff wanting Eugenie Davies to stay alive? Why's that, Miss Lewis?" "That's privileged information." "Cheers. So add to your privileged information this bit: Last night a second hit and run happened in Hammersmith. Round midnight this one was. The officer who first put Katja away. He's not dead, but he's hanging on the edge. And you got to know how cops feel 'bout a suspect when one of their own goes down." This piece of news seemed to make the first dent in Harriet Lewis's armour of calm. She adjusted her spine microscopically and said, "Katja Wolff is not involved in any of this." "So you get paid to say. And paid to believe. So your partner would proba'ly say and proba'ly believe if you had a partner." "Stop harping on that. You and I both know that I'm not responsible for a piece of misinformation passed to you by a client when I'm not present." "Right. But you are present now. And now that it's clear you got no partner, p'rhaps we need to dwell on why I was told that you had." "I have no idea." "Don't you." Nkata took out his notebook and his pencil, and he tapped the pencil against the notebook's leather cover for emphasis. "Here's what it's looking like to me: You're Katja Wolff s brief, but you're something else 's well, something tastier and something that's lying just the other side of what's on the up and up in your business. Now ' "You're incredible." ' word of that gets out, you start looking bad, Miss Lewis. You got some code of ethics or other, and solicitor playing love monkeys with her client isn't part of that code. Fact, it starts looking like that's why you take on lags in the first place: Get 'em when they're at their lowest, you do, and it's plain sailing when you want to pop 'em in bed." "That's outrageous." Harriet Lewis finally came round from behind her desk. She strode across the room, took position behind one of the chairs in the grouping by the coffee table, and gripped onto its back. "Leave this office, Constable." "Let's play at this," he said reasonably, settling back into his chair. "Let's think out loud." "Your sort's not even capable of doing it silently." Nkata smiled. He gave himself a point. He said, "Stick with me, then, all the same." "I've no intention of speaking with you further. Now leave, or I'll see to it you're brought to the attention of the PCA." "What're you going to complain 'bout? And how's it likely to look when the story gets out that you couldn't cope with one lone copper come to talk to you about a killer? And not jus' any killer, Miss Lewis. A baby killer, twenty years put away." The solicitor made no reply to this. Nkata pressed on, nodding in the direction of Harriet Lewis's desk. "So you phone up Police Complaints right now, and you shout harassment and you file whatever you want to file. And when the story finds it way to the papers, you watch and see who gets the smear." "You're blackmailing me." "I'm telling you the facts. You c'n do with them what you want. What I want is the truth about Galveston Road. Give me that and I'm gone." "Go there yourself." "Been there once. Not going again without ammunition." "Galveston Road has nothing to do with ' "Miss Lewis? Don't play me like a fool." Nkata nodded at her telephone. "You making that call to the PCA? You ready to file your complaint ga inst me?" Harriet Lewis appeared to consider her options as she let out a breath. She came round the chair. She sat. She said, "Katja Wolff s alibi lives in that house, Constable Nkata. She's a woman called Noreen McKay, and she's unwilling to step forward and clear Katja from suspicion. We went there last night to talk to her about it. We weren't successful. And I very much doubt you'll be." "Why's that?" Nkata asked. Harriet Lewis smoothed down her skirt. She fingered a minute length of thread that she found at the edge of a button on her jacket. "I suppose you'd call it a code of ethics," she finally said. "She's a solicitor?" Harriet Lewis stood. "I'm going to have to phone Katja and request her permission to answer that question," she said. Libby Neale went straight to the refrigerator when she got home from South Kensington. She was having a major white jones, and she considered herself deserving of having the attack taken care of. She kept a pint of vanilla Haagen-Dazs in the freezer for just such emergencies. She dug this out, ferreted a spoon from the utensil drawer, and prised open the lid. She'd gobbled up approximately one dozen spoonfuls before she was even able to think. When she finally did think, what she thought was more white, so she rustled through the trash under the kitchen sink and found part of the bag of cheddar popcorn that she'd thrown away in a moment of disgust on the previous day. She sat on the floor and proceeded to cram into her mouth the two handfuls of popcorn that were left in the bag. From there, she went to a package of flour tortillas, which she'd long kept as a challenge to herself to stay away from anything white. These, she found, weren't exactly white any longer as spots of mould were growing on them like ink stains on linen. But mould was easy enough to remove and if she ingested some by mistake, it couldn't hurt, could it? Consider penicillin. She rustled a cube of Wensleydale from its wrapper and sliced enough for a quesadilla. She plopped the cheese slices onto the tortilla, topped that with another, and slapped the whole mess into a frying pan. When the Wensleydale was melted and the tortilla was browned, she took the treat from the fire, rolled it into a tube, and settled herself on the kitchen floor. She proceeded to shove the food into her mouth, eating like a victim of famine. When she'd polished off the quesadilla, she remained on the Boor, her head against one of the cupboard doors. She'd needed that, she told herself. Things were getting too weird and when things got too weird, you had to keep your blood sugar high. There was no telling when you'd need to take action. Gideon hadn't walked her from his father's flat to his car. He'd just shown her to the door and shut it behind her. She'd said, "You going to be okay, Gid?" as they'd made their way from the study. "I mean, this can't be the nicest place for you to wait. Look. Why'n't you come home with me? We can leave a note for your dad, and when he gets back, he can call you and we can drive back over." "I'll wait here," he'd said. And he'd opened the door and shut it without ever once looking at her. What did it mean that he wanted to wait for his dad? she wondered. Was this going to be the Big Showdown between them? She certainly hoped so. The Big Showdown had been a long time coming between Davies father and son. She tried to picture it, a confrontation provoked, for some reason, by Gideon's discovery of a second sister he hadn't even known he'd had. He'd take that card written to Richard by Virginia's mother and he'd wave it in front of his father's nose. He'd say, Tell me about her, you bastard. Tell me why I wasn't allowed to know her either." Because that seemed to be the crux of what had set Gideon off when he'd read the card: His dad had denied him another sibling when Virginia had been there all along. And why? Libby thought. Why had Richard made this move to isolate Gid from his surviving sister? It had to be the same reasons that Richard did everything else: to keep Gid focussed on the violin. No, no, no. Can't have friends, Gideon. Can't go to parties. Can't play at sports. Can't go to a real school. Must practise, play, perform, and provide. And you can't do that if you've got any interests away from your instrument. Like a sister, for example. God, Libby thought. He was such a shit. He was 50 totally screwing up Gideon's life. What, she wondered, would that life have been like had he not spent it playing his music? He would have gone to school like a regular kid. He would have played sports, like soccer or something. He would have ridden a bike, fallen out of trees, and maybe broken a bone or two. He would have met his buddies for beer in the evening and gone out on dates and screwed around in girls' pants and been normal. He would be so not who he was right now. Gideon deserved what other people had and took for granted, Libby told herself. He deserved friends. He deserved love. He deserved a family. He deserved a life. But he wasn't going to get any of that as long as Richard kept him under his thumb and as long as no one was willing to take positive action to alter the relationship Gideon had with his frigging father. Libby stirred at that and realised her scalp was tingling. She rolled her head against the cupboard door so that she could look at the kitchen table. She'd left Gideon's car keys there when she'd dashed into the kitchen to admit defeat to her attack of the whites, and it seemed to her now that her possession of those keys was meant to be, like a sign from God that she'd been sent into Gideon's life to be the one who took a stand. Libby got to her feet. She approached the keys in a state of pure resolution. She snatched them up from the table before she could talk herself out of it. She left the flat. Chapter Twenty-Two Yasmin Edwards sent Daniel across the street to the Army Centre, a chocolate cake in his hands. He was surprised, considering how she'd reacted in the past to his lingering round the uniformed men, but he said, "Wicked, Mum!" and grinned at her and was gone in an instant to make what she'd called a thank you visit to them. "Good of those blokes to offer you tea time to time," she told her son, and if Daniel recognised the contradiction in this statement from her earlier fury at the idea of someone pitying her son, he didn't mention it. Alone, Yasmin sat in front of the television set. She had the lamb stew simmering because bloody fool that she was she was still incapable of not doing what she'd said earlier she was going to do. She was also as unable to change her mind or to draw the line as she had been as Roger Edwards' girlfriend, his lover, his wife and then as an inmate in Holloway Prison. She wondered why now, but the answer lay before her in the hollowness she felt and the budding of a fear that she'd long ago buried. It seemed to her that her entire life had been described and dominated by that fear, a gripping terror of one thing that she'd been entirely unwilling to name, let alone to face. But all the running she'd done from the Bogey Man had only brought her to his embrace yet again. She tried not to think. She wanted not to ponder the fact that she'd been reduced once more to discovering that there was no sanctuary no matter how determinedly she believed there would be. She hated herself. She hated herself as much as she'd ever hated Roger Edwards and more far more than she hated Katja who'd brought her to this mirror of a moment and asked her to gaze long and gaze hard. It made no difference that every kiss, embrace, act of love, and conversation had been built on a lie she could not have discerned. What mattered was that she, Yasmin Edwards, had even allowed herself to be a party to it. So she was filled with self-loathing. She was consumed by a thousand, "I should've knowns." When Katja came in, Yasmin glanced at the clock. She was right on time, but she would be, wouldn't she, because the one thing Katja Wolff wasn't was blind to what was going on within others. It was a survival technique she'd learned inside. So she'd have read a whole book from Yasmin's visit to the laundry that morning. Thus, she'd be home on the stroke of dinner time, and she'd be prepared. What she'd be prepared for, Katja wouldn't know. That was the only advantage Yasmin had. The rest of the advantages were all her lover's, and the single most important one was exactly like a beacon that had long been shining although Yasmin had always refused to acknowledge it. Single-mindedness. That Katja Wolff had always had a goal was what had kept her sane in prison. She was a woman with plans: she always had been. "You must know what you want and who you will become when you are out of here," she'd told Yasmin time and again. "Do not let what they have done to you become their triumph. That will happen if you fail." Yasmin had learned to admire Katja Wolff for that stubborn determination to become who she'd always intended to become, despite her situation. And then she'd learned to love Katja Wolff for the solid foundation of the future she represented for them both, even while held within prison walls. She'd said to her, "You got twenty years in here. You think you're going to step outside and start designing clothes when you're forty-five years old?" "I will have a life," Katja had asserted. "I will prevail, Yas. I will have a life." That life needed to start somewhere once Katja did her time, made her way through open conditions, proved herself there, and was released into society. She needed a place where she would be safe from notice so that she could begin to build her world again. She wouldn't have wanted any spotlight on her. She wouldn't be able to achieve her dream if she failed to fit easily back into the world. Even then, it would be tough: establishing herself in the competitive arena of fashion when all she was, at best, was a notorious graduate of the criminal justice system. When she'd first fixed herself up in Kennington with Yasmin, Yasmin had understood that Katja would have to undergo a period of adjustment before she began to fulfill the dreams she'd spoken of. So she'd given her time to reacquaint herself with freedom, and she had not questioned the fact that Katja's talk of goals within prison did not immediately translate to action once she was outside. People were different, she told herself. It meant nothing that she Yasmin had begun to work at her new life furiously and single-mindedly the moment she was finally released. She, after all, had a son to provide for and a lover whose arrival she spent years anticipating. She had more incentive to put her world in order so that Daniel first and then Katja afterwards would have the home they both deserved. But now she saw that Katja's talk had been just that. She had no inclination to make her way in the world because she did not need to. Her spot in the world had long been reserved. Yasmin didn't move from the sofa as Katja shrugged out of her coat, saying, "Mein Gott. I'm exhausted," and then, seeing her, "What're you doing in the dark there, Yas?" She crossed the room and switched on the table lamp, homing in as she usually did on the cigarettes that Mrs. Crushley wouldn't allow her to smoke anywhere near the laundry. She lit up from a book of matches that she took from her pocket and tossed down on the coffee table next to the packet of Dunhills from which she'd scored the cigarette. Yasmin leaned forward and picked up the matches. Frere Jacques Bar and Brasserie were the words printed on it. "Where's Daniel?" Katja said, looking round the flat. She stepped into the kitchen and took note of the fact that the table was set only for two because the next thing she said was, "Has he gone to a mate's for dinner, Yas?" "No," Yasmin said. "He'll be home soon." She'd set it up that way to make sure she didn't cave in to her cowardice at the final moment. "Then why's the table Katja stopped. She was a woman who had the discipline not to betray herself, and Yasmin saw her use that discipline now, silencing her own question. Yasmin smiled bitterly. Right, she told her lover in silence. Didn't think little Pinky would open her eyes, did you, Kat? And if she opened them or had them opened, didn't expect her to make a move, make the first move, put herself out there alone and afraid, did you, Kat? "Cause you had five years to suss out how to get inside her skin and make her feel like she had a future with you. "Cause even then you knew that if anyone ever made this little bitch start seeing possibilities where there wasn't a hope in hell of planting one, she'd give herself over to that worthless cow and do anything it took to make her happy. And that's what you needed, isn't it, Kat? That's what you were counting on. She said, "I been to Number Fifty-five." Katja said guardedly, "You've been where?" And those v's were present in her voice again, those once charming hallmarks of her dissimilarity. "Number Fifty-five Galveston Road. Wandsworth. South London," Yasmin said. Katja didn't reply, but Yasmin could see her thinking despite the fact that her face was the perfect blank she'd learned to produce for anyone looking her way in prison. Her expression said, Nothing going on inside here. Her eyes, however, locked too tightly on Yasmin's. Yasmin noticed for the first time that Katja was grimy: Her face was oily and her blonde hair clung in spears to her skull. "Didn't go there tonight," she noted evenly. "Decided to shower at home, I s'pose." Katja came nearer. She drew in deeply on her cigarette, and Yasmin could see that still she was thinking. She was thinking it could all be a trick to force her into admitting something that Yasmin was only guessing at in the first place. She said, "Yas," and put out her hand and grazed it along the line of plaits that Yasmin had drawn back from her face and tied at the nape of her neck with a scarf. Yasmin jerked away. "Didn't need to shower there, I s'pose," Yasmin said. "No cunt juice on your face tonight. Right?" "Yasmin, what are you talking about?" "I'm talking about Number Fifty-five, Katja. Galveston Road. I'm talking about what you do when you go there." "I go there to meet my solicitor," Katja said. "Yas, you heard me tell that detective so this morning. Do you think I'm lying? Why would I lie? If you wish to phone Harriet and ask her if she and I went there together ' "I went there," Yasmin announced flatly. "I went there, Katja. Are you listenin' to me?" "And?" Katja asked. Still so calm, Yasmin thought, still so sure of herself or at least still so capable of looking that way. And why? Because she knew that no one was at home during the day. She believed that anyone ringing the bell would have no luck learning who lived within. Or perhaps she was just buying time to think how to explain it all away. Yasmin said, "No one was home." "I see." "So I went to a neighbour and asked who lives there." She felt the betrayal swelling inside her, like a balloon too inflated that climbed to her throat. She forced herself to say, "Noreen McKay," and she waited to hear her lover's response. What's it going to be? she thought. An excuse? A declaration of misunderstanding? An attempt at a reasonable explanation? Katja said, "Yas .. ." Then she murmured, "Bloody hell," and the Englishism sounded so strange coming from her that Yasmin felt, if only for an instant, as if she were talking to a different person entirely to the Katja Wolff she'd loved for the last three of her years in prison and all of the five years that had followed them. "I do not know what to say," she sighed. She came round the coffee table and joined Yasmin on the sofa. Yasmin flinched at her nearness. Katja moved away. "I packed your things," Yasmin said. "They're in the bedroom. I didn't want Dan to see ... I'll tell him tomorrow. He's used to you not being here some nights anyway." "Yas, it wasn't always ' Yasmin could hear her voice go higher as she said, "There's dirty clothes to be washed. I put them separate in a Sainsbury's bag. You can do them tomorrow or borrow a washing machine tonight or stop at a launderette or ' "Yasmin, you must hear me. We were not always .. . Noreen and I ... We were not always together as you're thinking we were. This is something .. ." Katja moved closer again. She put her hand on Yasmin's thigh, and Yasmin felt her body go rigid at the touch and that tensing of muscles, that hardening of joints brought too much back, brought everything back, shot her into her past where the faces overhung her .. . She leaped to her feet. She covered her ears. "Stop it! You burn in hell!" she cried. Katja held out her hand but didn't rise from the sofa. She said, "Yasmin, listen to me. This is something I cannot explain. It's here inside and it's been here forever. I cannot get it out of my system. I try. It fades. Then it comes back again. With you, Yasmin, you must listen to me. With you, I thought ... I hoped "You used me," Yasmin said. "No thinking, no hoping. Using, Katja. Because what you thought was if things looked like you moved on from her, she'd finally have to step forward and say who she really was. But she didn't do that when you were inside. And she didn't do that when you came out. But you keep thinking she's going to do that, so you set up with me to force her hand. Only that's not how it works 'less she knows what you're up to and with who, right? And it sure's hell don't work 'less you give her a taste now and then of what she's missing." "That is not how it is." "You telling me you haven't done it, the two of you? You haven't been with her since you got out? You haven't been slithering over there after work, after dinner, even after you been with me and say you can't sleep and need a walk and know I won't wake up till morning and I can see it all now, Katja. And I want you gone." "Yas, I have no place to go." Yasmin breathed out a laugh. "I expect one phone call'll sort that out." "Please, Yasmin. Come. Sit. Let me tell you how it has been." "How it's been is you waiting. Oh, I d'n't see't at first. I thought you 're trying to adjust to outside. I thought you 're getting ready to make a life for yourself- for you and me and Dan, Katja but all the time you were waiting for her. You were always waiting. You were waiting to make yourself part of her life and once you got there, everything in yours'd be taken care of just fine." "That's not how it is." "No? Really? You make one move to get yourself together since you been out? You phone up design schools? You talk to anyone? You walk into one of those Knightsbridge shops and offer yourself as a 'prentice?" "No. I have not done that." "And we both know why. You don't need to make a life for yourself if she does it for you." "That is not the case." Katja rose from the sofa, crushing out her cigarette in the ashtray, spilling ash onto the table top where it lay like the remnants of disappointed dreams. "I make my own life as always," she said. "It's different from the life I thought I'd have, yes. It's different from the life I spoke of inside, yes. But Noreen doesn't make that life for me any more than you do, Yasmin. I make it myself. And that is what I have been doing since I was released. That is what Harriet is helping me to do. That is why I spent twenty years in prison and did not go mad. Because I knew I knew what waited for me when I got out." "Her," Yasmin said. "She waited, right? So go to her. Leave." "No. You must understand. I will make you ' Make you, make you, make you. Too many people had made her already. Yasmin clutched her hands to her head. "Yasmin, I did three evil things in my life. I made Hannes take me over the Wall by threatening to tell the authorities." "That's ancient history." "It's more than that. Listen. That was my first evil, what I did to Hannes. But I also did not speak up when I once should have spoken. That's the second thing. And then, once only once, Yas, but once was enough I listened when I should have covered my ears. And I paid for all of it. Twenty years I paid. Because I was lied to. And now others must pay. That's what I have been setting about." "No! I won't hear!" In panic, Yasmin dashed to the bedroom where she'd packed up Katja's small wardrobe of bright second-hand clothes -all those clothes that defined who Katja was, a woman who would never wear black in a city where black was everywhere into a duffel bag that she'd bought for that purpose, shelling out her own money as a way of paying for every mistake she'd made in trust. She didn't want to hear, but more than that, she knew she couldn't afford to hear. Hearing what Katja had to say put her at risk, put her future with Daniel at risk, and she wouldn't do that. She grabbed the duffel bag and slung it out into the sitting room. She followed it with the Sainsbury's bags of dirty laundry and then the single cardboard box that contained the toiletries and other supplies Katja had brought with her into the flat. She cried out, "I told him, Katja. He knows. You got that? I told him. I told: She said, "Who?" "You know who. Him: Yasmin drew her fingers down her cheek to indicate the scar that marked the black detective's face. "You weren't here watching the telly, and he knows." "But he is ... they are ... all of them .. . Yas, you know they are your enemy. What they did to you when you defended yourself against Roger .. . What they put you through? How could you trust ' "That's what you were depending on, wasn't it? Old Yas won't ever trust a copper, no matter what he says, no matter what I do. So I'll just set myself up with good old Yas, and she'll protect me when they come calling. She'll follow my lead, just like she did inside. But that's over, Katja. Whatever it was, and I don't much care. It's over." Katja looked down at the bags. She said quietly, "We are so close to ending things after all these ' Yasmin slammed the bedroom door to cut off her words and to cut herself off from further danger. And then, finally, she began to weep. Over her tears, she could hear the sound of Katja gathering up her belongings. When the flat door opened and closed a moment later, Yasmin knew her lover was gone. "So it's not about the kid," Havers said to Lynley, concluding the update of her second visit to the Convent of the Immaculate Conception. "He's called Jeremy Watts, by the way. The nun's always known where he was; Katja Wolff s always known that she's known. She's gone twenty years without asking about him. She's gone twenty years without talking to Sister Cecilia at all. So it's not about the kid." "There's something not natural in that," Lynley said reflectively. "There's plenty not natural in all of her," Havers replied. "In all of them. I mean, what's going on with Richard Davies, Inspector? Okay, all right. Virginia was retarded. He was cut up about that. Who wouldn't be? But never even to see her again.. . and to let his dad dictate .. . And why the hell were he and Lynn living with his dad anyway? Sure, those were impressive digs in Kensington and maybe Richard's a bloke who likes to make an impression. And p'rhaps Mum and Dad might've lost the ancestral pile or something if Richard didn't contribute by living there and paying through the nose or whatever, but still .. ." "The relationship between fathers and sons is always complicated," Lynley said. "More than mothers and daughters?" "Indeed. Because so much more goes unspoken." They were in a cafe in Hampstead High Street, not far from the station in Downshire Hill. They'd rendezvoused there by prior arrangement, Havers phoning Lynley on his mobile as he was setting out from Stamford Brook. He'd told her about Webberly's heart attack, and she'd cursed fervently and asked what she could do. His had been what Randie's had been when she'd phoned the house from the hospital to share an update with her mother not long before Lynley left: They could do nothing but pray; the doctors were watching him. She'd said, "What the hell does "watching him" mean?" Lynley hadn't replied because it seemed to him that 'watching the patient's progress' was a medical euphemism for waiting for an appropriate moment to pull the plug. Now, across the table from Havers with an un doctored espresso (his) and a coffee loaded with milk and sugar not to mention a pain au chocolate (both hers) between them, Lynley dug out his handkerchief from his pocket and spread it out on the table, disclosing its contents. He said, "We may be down to this," and indicated the shards of glass he'd taken from the edge of the pavement in Crediton Hill. Havers scrutinised them. "Headlamp?" she asked. "Not considering where I found them. Swept under a hedge." "Could be nothing, sir." "I know," Lynley said gloomily. "Where's Winnie? What's he come up with, Inspector?" "He's on Katja Wolff s trail." Lynley filled her in on what Nkata had reported to him earlier. She said, "So are you leaning towards Wolff? Because like I said ' "I know. If she's our killer, it's not about her son. So what's her motive?" "Revenge? Could they have framed her, Inspector?" "With Webberly part of the they? Christ. I don't want to think so." "But with him involved with Eugenie Davies.. ." Havers had brought her coffee to her lips, but she didn't drink, instead looking at him over the top of it. "I'm not saying he would've done it deliberately, sir. But if he was involved, he could've been blinded, could've been .. . well, led to believe .. . You know." "That presupposes the CPS, a jury and a judge were all led to believe as well," Lynley said. "It's happened," Havers pointed out. "And more than once. You know that." "All right. Accepted. But why didn't she speak? If evidence was doctored, if testimony was false, why didn't she speak? "There's that," Havers sighed. "We always come back to it." "We do." Lynley took a pencil from his breast pocket. With it, he moved about the pieces of glass at the centre of his handkerchief. "Too thin for a headlamp," he told Havers. "The first pebble that hit it on the motorway, for instance would have smashed to bits a headlamp made of this sort of glass." "Broken glass in a hedgerow?" Havers said. "It's probably from a bottle. Someone coming out of a party with a bottle of plonk under his arm. He's had a few and he staggers. It drops, breaks, and he kicks the shards to one side." "But there's no curve, Havers. Look at the larger pieces. They're straight." "Okay. They're straight. But if you expect to tie these to one of our principals, I think you're going to be wandering in the outback without a guide." Lynley knew she was right. He gathered the handkerchief together again, slipped it into his pocket, and brooded. His fingers played with the top of his espresso cup as his eyes examined the ring of sludge left in it. For her part, Havers polished off her pain au chocolate, emerging from the exercise with flakes of pastry on her lips. He said, "You're hardening your arteries, Constable." "And now I'm going after my lungs." She wiped her mouth with a paper napkin and dug out her packet of Players. She said in advance of his protest, "I'm owed this. It's been a long day. I'll blow it over my shoulder, okay?" Lynley was too dispirited to argue. Webberly's condition was heavy in his mind, weighing only slightly less than Frances's knowledge of her husband's affair. He forced himself away from these thoughts, saying, "All right. Let's look at everyone again. Notes?" Havers blew out a lungful of smoke impatiently, "We've done this, Inspector. We don't have a thing." "We've got to have something," Lynley said, putting on his reading glasses. "Notes, Havers." She groused but brought them out of her shoulder bag. Lynley took his from his jacket pocket. They started with those individuals without alibis that could be corroborated. Ian Staines was Lynley's first offering. He was desperate for money, which his sister had promised to request from her son. But she'd reneged on that promise, leaving Staines in dangerous straits. "He looks about to lose his home," Lynley said. "The night of the death, they rowed. He could have followed her up to London. He didn't get home till after one." "But the car's not right," Havers said. "Unless he had a second vehicle with him in Henley." "Which he may have done," Lynley noted. "Parked there previously just in case. Someone has access to a second vehicle, Havers." They went on to the multi-named J.W. Pitchley, Havers' prime candidate at this point. "What the hell," she wanted to know, 'was his address doing in Eugenie Davies' possession? Why was she heading to see him? Staines says she told him something came up. Was that something Pitchley?" "Possibly, save for the fact that we can establish no tie between them. No phone tie, internet tie ' "Snail mail?" "How did she track him down?" "Same way I did, Inspector. She figured he'd changed identities once, why not again?" "All right. But why would she arrange to see him?" Havers took a different tack from all the possibilities she'd offered earlier in the case. She said, "Maybe he arranged to see her once she'd located him. And she contacted him because .. ." Havers considered the potential reasons, settling on, 'because Katja Wolff just got out of the slammer. If the whole boiling lot of them framed her and she was finally out of prison, they'd have plans to lay, right? About how to deal with her if she came calling?" "But we're back to that, Havers. An entire household of people framing an individual who then doesn't utter a word in her own defence? Why?" "Fear of what they could do to her? The granddad sounds like a real terror. P'rhaps he got to her in some way. He said, "Play our game or we'll let the world know .. ." Havers considered this and rejected her own idea, saying. "Know what? That she was in the club? Big deal. Like anyone cared at that point? It came out that she was pregnant anyway." Lynley held up a hand to stop her from dismissing the thought. He said, "But you could be on to something, Barbara. It could have been, "Play our game or we'll let it out who the father of your baby is." "Big deal again." "Yes, big deal," Lynley argued, 'if it's not a case of letting the world know who the father is, but letting Eugenie Davies know." "Richard?" "It wouldn't be the first time the man of the house got entangled with the nanny." "What about him, then?" Havers said. "What about Davies knocking off Eugenie?" "Motive and alibi," Lynley pointed out. "He doesn't have one. He has the other. Although the reverse could be said of Robson." "But where does Webberly fit in? In fact, where does he fit in no matter who we go with?" "He fits in only with Wolff. And that takes us back to the original crime: the murder of Sonia Davies. And that takes us back to the initial group who were involved in the subsequent investigation." "P'rhaps someone's just making it look like everything's connected to that period of time, sir. Because isn't it the truth that a more profound connection exists: the romantic one between Webberly and Eugenie Davies? And that takes us to Richard, doesn't it? To Richard or to Frances Webberly." Lynley didn't want to think of Frances. He said, "Or to Gideon, blaming Webberly for the end of his parents' marriage." "That's weak." "But something's going on with him, Havers. If you met him, you'd agree. And he has no alibi, other than being home alone." "Where was his dad?" Lynley referred to his notes once again. "With the fiancee. She confirms." "But he's got a much better motive than Gideon if the Webberly-Eugenie connection's behind this." "Hmm. Yes. I do see that. But to assign him the motive of rubbing out his wife and Webberly begs the questions of why he would wait all these years to see to the job." "He had to wait till now. This is when Katja Wolff was released. He'd know we'd establish a trail to her." "That's nursing a grievance for a hell of a long time." "So maybe it's a more recent grievance." "More recent .. . ? Are you arguing he's fallen in love with her a second time in his life?" Lynley considered his question. "All right. I think it's unlikely, but for the sake of argument, I'll go with it. Let's consider the possibility that he's had his love for his former wife reawakened. We begin with him divorced from her." "Destroyed by the fact that she walked out on him," Havers added. "Right. Now, Gideon has trouble with the violin. His mother reads about that trouble in the papers or hears it from Robson. She gets back in touch with Davies." "They talk often. They begin to reminisce. He thinks they're going to make a go of it again, and he's hot to trot ' "This is, of course, ignoring the entire question of Jill Foster," Lynley pointed out. "Hang on, Inspector. Richard and Eugenie talk about Gideon. They talk about old times, their marriage, whatever. Everything he's felt gets fired up again. He becomes a potato all hot for the oven, only to find out that Eugenie's got someone lined up in her knickers already: Wiley." "Not Wiley," Lynley said. "He's too old. Davies wouldn't see him as competition. Besides, Wiley told us she had something she wanted to reveal to him. She'd said as much. But she didn't want to reveal it three nights ago ' "Because she was headed to London," Havers said. "To Crediton Hill." "To Pitchley-Pitchford-Pytches," Lynley said. "The end is always the beginning, isn't it?" He found the reference in his notes that supplied a single piece of information that had been there all along, just waiting for the correct interpretation. He said, "Wait. When I brought up the idea of another man, Havers, Davies went straight to him. By name, in fact. Without a doubt in his mind. I've got him naming Pytches right here in my notes." "Pytches?" Havers asked. "No. It's not Pytches, Inspector. That can't Lynley's mobile rang. He grabbed it from the table top and held up a finger to stop Havers from continuing. She was itching to do so, however. She'd stubbed out her cigarette impatiently, saying, "What day did you talk to Davies, Inspector?" Lynley waved her off, clicked on his mobile, said, "Lynley," and turned away from Havers' smoke. His caller was DCI Leach. "We've got another victim," he announced. Winston Nkata read the sign HM Prison Holloway and reflected on the fact that had his life taken a slightly different turn, had his mum not fainted dead away at the sight of her son in a casualty ward with thirty-four stitches closing an ugly slash on his face, he might have ended up in such a place. Not in this place, naturally, which imprisoned only women, but in a place just like it. The Scrubs, perhaps, or Dartmoor or the Ville. Doing time inside because what he'd not been able to manage was doing life outside. But his mum had fainted. She had murmured, "Oh, Jewel," and had slid to the floor like her legs'd turned to jelly. And the sight of her there with her turban askew so that he could see what he'd never noticed before, that her hair was actually going grey made him finally accept her not like the indomitable force he thought she was but instead like a real woman for once, a woman who loved and relied on him to make her proud that she'd given birth. And that had been that. But had the moment not occurred, had his dad come to fetch him instead, flinging him into the back seat of the car with a demonstration of the full measure of the disgust he deserved, the outcome might have been quite different. He might have felt the need to prove he didn't care that he'd become the recipient of his father's displeasure, and he might have felt the need to prove it by upping the stakes in the Brixton Warriors' longtime battle with the smaller upstart Longborough Bloods to secure a patch of ground called Windmill Gardens and make it part of their turf. But the moment had happened, and his life course had altered, bringing him to where he was now: staring at the windowless brick bulk of Holloway Prison inside which Katja Wolff had met both Yasmin Edwards and Noreen McKay. He'd parked across the street from the prison, in front of a pub with boarded-up windows that looked like something straight out of Belfast. He'd eaten an orange, studied the prison entrance, and meditated on what everything meant. Particularly, he meditated on what it meant that the German woman was living with Yasmin Edwards but messing around with someone else, just as he'd suspected when he'd seen those shadows merging on the curtains in the window of Number Fifty-five Galveston Road. His orange consumed, he ducked across the street when the heavy traffic in Parkhurst Road was halted at the traffic lights. He approached reception and dug out his warrant card, presenting it to the officer behind the desk. She said, "Is Miss McKay expecting you?" He said, "Official business. She won't be surprised to know I'm here." The receptionist said she would phone, if Constable Nkata wanted to have a seat. It was late in the day and whether Miss McKay would be able to see him .. . "Oh, I 'xpect she'll be able to see me," Nkata said. He didn't sit but rather walked to the window where he looked out on more of the vast brick walls. As he watched the traffic passing by in the street, a guard gate raised to accommodate a prison van, no doubt returning an inmate at the end of a day's trial at the Old Bailey. This would have been how Katja Wolff had come and gone during those long ago days of her own trial. She'd have been accompanied daily by a prison officer, who would remain in court with her, right inside the dock. That officer would have ferried her to and from her cell beneath the courtroom, made her tea, escorted her to lunch, and seen her back to Holloway for the night. An officer and an inmate alone, during the most difficult period of that inmate's life. "Constable Nkata?" Nkata swung round to see the receptionist holding a telephone receiver out to him. He took it from her, said his name, and heard a woman say in response, "There's a pub across the street. On the corner of Hillmarton Road. I can't see you in here, but if you wait in the pub, I'll join you in quarter of an hour." He said, "Make it five minutes and I'm on my way without hanging about chatting to anyone." She exhaled loudly, said, "Five minutes, then," and slammed down the phone at her end. Nkata went back to the pub, which turned out to be a nearly empty room as cold as a barn where the air was redolent mostly of dust. He ordered himself a cider, and he took his drink to a table that faced the door. She didn't make it in five, but she arrived under ten, coming through the door with a gust of wind. She looked round the pub, and when her eyes fell upon Nkata, she nodded once and came over to him, taking the long sure strides of a woman with power and confidence. She was quite tall, not as tall as Yasmin Edwards but taller than Katja Wolff, perhaps five foot ten. She said, "Constable Nkata?" He said, "Miss McKay?" She pulled out a chair, unbuttoned her coat, shrugged out of it, and sat, elbows on the table and hands fingering back her hair. This was blonde and cut short, leaving her ears bare. She wore small pearl studs in their lobes. For a moment, she kept her head bent, but when she drew in a breath and looked up, her blue eyes fixed on Nkata with plain dislike. "What do you want from me? I don't like interruptions while I'm at work." "Could've caught up with you at home," Nkata said. "But here was closer than Galveston Road from Harriet Lewis's office." At the mention of the solicitor, her face became guarded. "You know where I live," she said cautiously. "Followed a bird called Katja Wolff there last night. From Kennington to Wandsworth by bus, this was. It was in'ersting to note that she went the whole route and didn't stop once to ask directions. Seems like she knew where she was going good enough." Noreen McKay sighed. She was middle-aged probably near fifty, Nkata thought but the fact that she wore little make-up served her well. She heightened what she had without looking painted, so her colour seemed authentic. She was neatly dressed in the uniform of the prison. Her white blouse was crisp, the navy epaulets bore their brass ornamentation brightly, and her trousers had creases that would have done a military man proud. She had keys on her belt, a radio as well, and some sort of pouch. She looked impressive. She said, "I don't know what this is about, but I've nothing to say to you, Constable." "Not even 'bout Katja Wolff?" he asked her." "Bout what she was doing calling on you with her solicitor in tow? They filing a law suit ga inst you, or something?" "As I just said, I've nothing to say, and there's no room for compromise in my position. I've a future and two adolescents to consider." "Not a husband, though?" She brushed one hand through her hair again. It seemed to be a characteristic gesture. "I've never been married, Constable. I've had my sister's children since they were four and six years old. Their father didn't want them when Susie died too busy playing the footloose bachelor -but he's started coming round now he's realising he won't be twenty years old forever. Frankly, I don't want to give him a reason to take them." "There's a reason, then? What would that be?" Noreen McKay shoved away from the table and went to the bar instead of replying. There, she placed an order and waited while her gin was poured over two ice cubes and a bottle of tonic set next to it. Nkata watched her, trying to fill in the blanks with a simple scrutiny of her person. He wondered which part of prison work had first attracted Noreen McKay: the power it provided over other people, the sense of superiority it offered, or the chance it represented to cast a fishing line in waters where the trout had no psychological protection. She returned to the table, her drink in hand. She said, "You saw Katja Wolff and her solicitor come to my home. That's the extent of what you saw." "Saw her let herself in 's well. She didn't knock." "Constable, she's German." Nkata cocked his head. "I got no recollection of Germans not knowing they're s'posed to knock on strangers' doors before walking in on them, Miss McKay. Mostly, I think they know the rules. Especially the ones telling them that they don't have to knock where they already've got themselves well established." Noreen McKay lifted her gin and tonic. She drank but made no reply. Nkata said, "What I'm wondering 'bout the whole situation is this: Is Katja the first lag you had some rabbit with or was she just one in a line of nellies?" The woman flushed. "You don't know what you're talking about." "What I'm talking about's your position at Holloway and how you might've used and abused it over the years, and what action the guvnors might think of taking if word got out you've been doing the nasty where you ought to be just locking the doors. You got how many years in the job? You got a pension? In line for promotion to warden? What?" She smiled without humour, saying, "You know, I wanted to be a policeman, Constable, but I've dyslexia and I couldn't pass the exams. So I turned to prison work because I like the idea of citizens upholding the law, and I believe in punishing those who cross the line." "Which you yourself did. With Katja. She was doing twenty years ' "She didn't do all her time at Holloway. Virtually no one does. But I've been here for twenty-four years. So I expect your assumption whatever it is has a number of holes in it." "She was here on remand, she was here for the trial, she did some time here. And when she went off- to Durham, was it? she'd be able to list her visitors, wouldn't she? And whose name d'you think I'd find in her records as the one to admit proba'ly the only one to admit aside from her brief for her visits? And she'd be back in Holloway to do some of her time, I expect. Yeah. I expect that could've been fixed up easy enough from within. What's your job, Miss McKay?" "Deputy Warden," she said. "I imagine you know that." "Deputy Warden with a taste for the ladies. You always been bent?" "That's none of your business." Nkata slapped his hand on the table and leaned towards the woman. "It's all my business," he told her. "Now, you want me to troll through Katja's records, find all the prisons she was locked up in, get all the visitors lists she filled out, see your name topping them, and put the thumb screws to you? I c'n do that, Miss McKay, but I don't like to. It wastes my time." She lowered her gaze to her drink, turning the glass slowly on the mat beneath it. The pub door opened, letting in another gust of chill evening air and the smell of exhaust fumes from Parkhurst Road, and two men in the uniform of prison workers walked inside. They fixed on Noreen, then on Nkata, then back to Noreen. One smiled and made a low comment. Noreen looked up and saw them. She breathed an oath and said, "I've got to get out of here," beginning to rise. Nkata closed his hand over her wrist. "Not without giving me something," he told her. "Else I'm going to have to look through those records, Miss McKay. And if your name's there, I 'xpect you'll have some real 'xplaining to do to your guy." "Do you threaten people often?" "Not a threat. Just a simple fact. Now sit back down and 'tend to your drink." He nodded towards her colleagues. "I 'xpect I'm doing your reputation some good." Her face flared with red. "You completely despicable ' "Chill," he said. "Let's talk about Katja. She gave me the go ahead to talk to you, by the way." "I don't believe ' "Phone her." "She ' "She's a suspect in a hit-and-run murder. And a suspect in a second hit and run as well. "F you can clear her name, you better set to it. She's 'bout two breaths away from getting arrested. And you think we'll be able to keep that from the press? Notorious baby killer "helping the police with their enquiries" again? Not likely, Miss McKay. Her whole life's about to go under the microscope. And I 'xpect you know what that means." "I can't clear her name," Noreen McKay said, her fingers tightening on her gin and tonic. "That's just it, you see? I can't clear her name." Chapter Twenty-Three "Waddington," DCI Leach informed them when Lynley and Havers joined him in the incident room. He was all exultation: his face brighter than it had been in days and his step lighter as he dashed across the room to scrawl Kathleen Waddington at the top of one of the china boards. "Where was she hit?" Lynley asked. "Maida Vale. And it's the same m.o. Quiet neighbourhood. Pedestrian alone. Night. Black car. Smash." "Last night?" Barbara Havers asked. "But that would mean ' "No, no. This was ten days ago." "Could be a coincidence," Lynley said. "Not bloody likely. She's a player from before." Leach went on to explain precisely who Kathleen Waddington was: a sex therapist who'd left her clinic on the night in question after ten o'clock. She'd been hit on the street and left with a broken hip and a dislocated shoulder. When she was interviewed by the police, she'd said the car that hit her was big, 'like a gangster car', that it moved fast, that it was dark, possibly black. Leach said, "I went through my notes from the other case, the baby drowning. Waddington was the woman who wrecked Katja Wolff s story about being out of the bathroom to take a phone call for a minute or less on the night that Sonia Davies drowned. Without Waddington, it still might have gone down to negligence and a few years in prison. With her showing Wolff up to be a liar ... It was another nail in the coffin. We need to bring Wolff in. Pass that word to Nkata. Let him have the glory. He's been working her hard." "What about the car?" Lynley asked. "That'll come in due course. You can't tell me she spent two decades inside without having formed more than one association she could depend on when she got out." "Someone with an old motor?" Barbara Havers asked. "Bet on it. I've got a PC going through the significant others right now," with a jerk of his head towards a female constable sitting at one of the terminals in the room. "She's picking up every name mentioned in every action report and running each through the system. We'll get our mitts on the prison records as well and run through everyone Wolff had contact with while she was inside. We can do that while we've got her in for questioning. D'you want to page your man and give him the message? Or shall I?" Leach rubbed his hands together briskly. The PC at the computer terminal rose from her seat at that moment, with a paper in her hand. She said, "I think I've got it, sir," and Leach bounded to her with a happy, "Brilliant. Good work, Vanessa. What've we got?" "A Humber," she said. The vehicle in question was a postwar saloon manufactured in the days when the relationship between petrol consumed and miles covered was not the first thing on a driver's mind. It was smaller than a Rolls Royce, a Bentley, or a Daimler not to mention less costly but it was larger than the average car on the street today. And whereas the modern car was manufactured from aluminium and alloy to keep its weight low and its mileage high, the Humber was fashioned from steel and chrome with a front end comprising a toothy sneer of heavy grillwork suitable for scooping from the air everything from winged insects to small birds. "Excellent," Leach said. "Whose is it?" Lynley asked. "Belongs to a woman," Vanessa told them. "She's called Jill Foster." "Richard Davies' fiancee?" Havers looked at Lynley. Her face broke into a smile. She said, "That's it. That's bloody it, Inspector. When you said ' But Lynley interrupted her. "Jill Foster? I can't see that, Havers. I've met the woman. She's enormously pregnant. She's not capable of this. And even if she were, why would she go after Waddington?" Havers said, "Sir .. ." Leach cut in, "There's got to be another car, then. Another old one." "How likely is that?" the PC said doubtfully. "Page Nkata," Leach told Lynley. And to Vanessa, "Get Wolff s prison records. We need to go through them. There's got to be a car ' "Hang on!" Havers said explosively. "There's another way to look at this, you lot. Listen. He said Pytches. Richard Davies said Pytches. Not Pitchley or Pitchford, but Pytches." She grasped Lynley's arm for emphasis. "You said he said Pytches when we were having coffee. You said you had Pytches in your notes. When you interviewed Richard Davies? Yes?" Lynley said, "Pytches? What's Jimmy Pytches have to do with this, Havers?" "It was a slip of the tongue, don't you see?" "Constable," Leach said irritably, 'what the hell are you on about?" Havers went on, directing her comments to Lynley. "Richard Davies wouldn't have made that kind of verbal mistake when he'd just been told his former wife was murdered. He couldn't have known J.W. Pitchley was Jimmy Pytches right at that moment. He might have known James Pitchford was Jimmy Pytches, yes, all right, but he didn't think of him as Pytches, he'd never known him as Pytches, so why the hell would he call him that in front of you since you yourself didn't know who Pytches even was at that point? Why would he ever call him that, in fact? He wouldn't unless it was on his mind because he'd had to go through what I'd gone through: the records in St. Catherine's. And why? In order to locate James Pitchford himself." "What is this?" Leach demanded. Lynley held up a hand, saying, "Hang on a moment, sir. She's got something. Havers, go on." "Too right I've got something," Havers asserted. "He'd been speaking to his ex-wife for months. You've got that in your notes. He said it and the BT records corroborate." "They do," Lynley said. "And Gideon told you they were supposed to meet, he and his mother. Right?" "Yes." "She was supposed to be able to help him get over his stage fright. That's what he said. That's also in your notes. Only they didn't meet, did they? They weren't able to meet because she was killed first. So what if she was killed to prevent them from meeting? She didn't know where Gideon lived, did she? The only way she could have found out was from Richard." Lynley said thoughtfully, "Davies wants to kill her, and he sees a way. Give her what she thinks is Gideon's address, arrange a time when they're supposed to meet, lie in wait for her ' ' and when she goes wandering down the street with the address in her hand or wherever it was, blam. He runs her down," Havers concluded. "Then he drives over her to finish her off. But he makes it look like it's related to the older crime by taking Waddington out first and Webberly afterwards." "Why?" Leach asked. "That's the question," Lynley acknowledged. He said to Havers, "It works, Barbara. I do see that it works. But if Eugenie Davies could help her son regain his music, why would Richard Davies want to stop her? From talking to the man not to mention from seeing his flat, which is a virtual shrine to Gideon's accomplishments the only reasonable conclusion is that Richard Davies was determined to get his son playing again." "So what if we've been looking at it wrong?" Havers asked. "In what way?" "I accept that Richard Davies wants Gideon to play again. If he had an issue with his playing like jealousy or something, like his kid being more of a success than he is and how can he handle that then he probably would have done something a long time ago to stop him. But from what we know, the kid's been playing since he was just out of nappies." "So it seems." "Okay. So what if Eugenie Davies was going to meet Gideon in order to stop him ever playing again?" "Why would she do that?" "What about quid pro quo to Richard? If their marriage ended because of something he'd done ' "Like putting the nanny in the club?" Leach suggested. "Or devoting his every waking moment to Gideon and forgetting he had a wife at all, a woman in mourning, a woman with needs .. . She loses a child and instead of having someone to lean on, she has Richard and all he cares about is getting Gideon through the trauma so he doesn't freak out and stop playing his music and stop being the son who's admired so much and on the edge of being famous and gratifying his daddy's every dream and what about her through all this? What about his mum? She's been forgotten, left to cope on her own, and she never forgets what it was like so when she has the chance to put the screws on Richard, she knows just how to do it: when he needs her just like she needed him." Havers drew a deep breath at the end of all this, looking from the DCI to Lynley for their reaction. Leach was the one to give it. "How?" "How what?" "How's she supposed to be able to stop her son playing? What's she going to do, Constable: break his fingers? Run him down?" Havers drew a second breath, but she let it out on a sigh. "I don't know," she said, her shoulders sagging. "Right," Leach snorted. "Well, when you do ' "No," Lynley cut in. "There's some sense to this, sir." "You're joking," Leach said. "There's something in it. Following Havers' line of thinking, we've got an explanation of why Eugenie Davies was carrying Pitchley's address that night, and nothing else we've come up with so far gets anywhere near explaining that." "Bollocks," Leach said. "What other explanation can we come up with? Nothing ties her to Pitchley. No letter, no phone call, no e-mail." "She had e-mail?" Leach demanded. Havers said, "Right. And her computer but she stopped herself abruptly, swallowing the rest of her sentence with a wince. "Computer? Leach echoed. "Where the hell's her computer? There's no computer mentioned in your reports." Lynley felt Havers look at him, then drop her glance to her shoulder bag where she rooted industriously for something that she probably didn't need. He wondered what would serve them better, truth or lie at this point. He opted for, "I checked the computer. There was nothing on it. She had e-mail, yes. But there was nothing from Pitchley. So I saw no need ' "To put it in your report?" Leach demanded. "What the hell kind of police work is that?" "It seemed unnecessary." "What? Good Christ. I want that computer in here, Lynley. I want our people on it like ants over ice cream. You're no computer expert. You might have missed .. . God damn it. Have you gone out of your mind? What the hell were you thinking?" What could he say? That he was thinking of saving time? saving trouble? saving a reputation? saving a marriage? He said carefully, "Getting into her e-mail wasn't a problem, sir. Once we managed that, we could see there was virtually nothing ' "Virtually? "Just a message from Robson, and we've spoken to him. He's holding something back, I think. But it's not the fact that he had anything to do with Mrs. Davies' death." "You know that, do you?" "It's a gut feeling, yes." "The same one that prompted you to hold back or is it remove? - a piece of evidence?" "It was a judgement call, sir." "You've no place making judgement calls. I want that computer. In here. Now." "As to the Humber?" Havers ventured delicately. "Bugger the Humber. And bugger Davies. Vanessa, get those sodding prison records of Wolff s. For all we know, she's got ten people on a string, all with vehicles as old as Methuselah, all of them somehow related to this case." "That's not what we have," Lynley said. "What you've come up with here, the Humber, can lead us ' "I said bugger the Humber, Lynley. We're back to square one as far as you're concerned. Bring in that computer. And when you're done, get on your knees and thank God I don't report you to your superiors." "It's time you came home with me, Jill." Dora Foster finished drying the last of the dishes and folded the tea towel neatly over its rack by the sink. She straightened its edges with her usual attention to microscopic detail, and she turned back to Jill, who was resting at the kitchen table, her feet up and her fingers kneading the aching muscles of her lower back. Jill felt as if she were carrying a fifty pound bag of flour in her stomach, and she wondered how on God's holy earth she was going to be able to get herself back into shape for her wedding just two months after the birth. "Our little Catherine's dropped into position," her mother said. "It's a matter of days. Any day now, in fact." "Richard's not quite resigned to the plan," Jill told her. "You're in better hands with me than you'd be alone in a delivery room with a nurse popping by occasionally to see that you're still among the living." "Mum, I know that. But Richard's concerned." "I've delivered ' "He knows." "Then ' "It's not that he thinks you aren't competent. But it's different, he says, when it's your own flesh and blood involved. He says a doctor wouldn't operate on his own child. A doctor couldn't remain objective if something were to happen. Like an emergency. A crisis. You know." "In an emergency, we go to hospital. Ten minutes in the car." "I've told him that. He says anything could happen in ten minutes." "Nothing will happen. This entire pregnancy has gone like a dream." "Yes. But Richard ' "Richard isn't your husband." Dora Foster said it firmly. "He could have been, but he chose not to be. And that gives him no rights in this decision. Have you pointed that out to him?" Jill sighed. "Mum "Don't mum me." "What difference does it make that we're not married just now? We're getting married: the church, the priest, down the aisle on Dad's arm, the hotel reception, everything properly seen to. What more do you need?" "It's not what I need," Dora said. "It's what you deserve. And don't tell me again this was your idea because I know that's nonsense. You've had your wedding planned since you were ten years old, from the flowers down to the cake decoration, and as I recall, nowhere in your plans did it ever state there'd be a baby in attendance." Jill didn't want to go into that. She said, "Times change, Mum." "But you do not. Oh, I know it's the fashion for women to find themselves a partner rather than a husband. A partner, like someone they've gone into the baby making business with. And when they have their babies, they parade them round in public without the slightest degree of embarrassment. I know this happens all the time. I'm not blind. But you aren't an actress or rock singer, Jill. You've always known your own mind, and you've never been one to do something just because it's in vogue." Jill stirred on her chair. Her mother knew her better than anyone, and what she was saying was true. But what was also true was the fact that compromise was necessary to have a successful relationship and beyond wanting a child, she wanted to have a marriage that was happy, which she certainly wasn't guaranteed if she forced Richard's hand. "Well, it's done," she said. "And it's too late to change things. I'm not about to waddle down the aisle like this." "Which makes you a woman without ties," her mother said. "So you can state how and where you want your baby delivered. And if Richard doesn't like it, you can point out to him that, as his preference was not to become your husband in the traditional fashion prior to the baby's birth, he can keep out of the picture until after you're married. Now Her mother joined her at the table, where a box of wedding invitations sat waiting to be addressed. - 'let's get your bag and take you home to Wiltshire. You can leave him a note. Or you can phone him. Shall I fetch the phone for you?" "I'm not going to Wiltshire tonight," Jill said. "I'll speak to Richard. I'll ask him again ' "Ask him?" Her mother put her hand on Jill's hugely swollen ankle. "Ask him what? Ask him if you can please have your baby ' "Catherine's his baby as well." "That has nothing to do with this. You're having her. Jill, this isn't at all like you. You've always known your own mind, but you're acting as if you're worried now, as if you might do something to drive him away. That's absurd, you know. He's lucky to have you. Considering his age, he's lucky to have any ' "Mum." This was one area that they'd long ago agreed not to discuss: Richard's age and the fact that he was two years older than Jill's own father and five years older than her mother. "You're right. I know my own mind. It's made up: I'll speak to Richard when he comes home. But I won't go to Wiltshire without speaking to him and I certainly won't go and just leave him a note." She gave her voice The Edge, a tone she'd long used at the BBC, just the inflection that had been needed to bring every production in on time and on budget. No one argued with her when her voice had The Edge. And Dora Foster didn't argue with her now. Instead, she sighed. She gazed at the ivory wedding dress that hung beneath its transparent shroud on the door. She said, "I never thought it would be like this." "It'll be fine, Mum." Jill told herself that she meant it. But when her mother had departed, she was left with her thoughts, those mischievous companions of one's solitude. They insisted she consider her mother's words carefully, which took her over the ground of her association with Richard. It didn't mean anything that he'd been the one who wished to wait. There had been logic involved in the decision. And they'd taken it mutually, hadn't they? What difference did it make that he'd been the one to suggest it? He'd used sound reasoning. She'd told him she was pregnant, and he'd been joyful at the news, as joyful as she herself had been. He'd said, "We'll get married. Tell me we'll get married," and she had laughed at the sight of his face looking so much like a little boy's, afraid of being disappointed. She'd said, "Of course we'll get married," and he'd pulled her into his arms and led her off into the bedroom. After their coupling they lay entwined and he talked about their wedding. She'd been filled with bliss, with that gratified and grateful aftermath of orgasm during which everything seems possible and anything seems reasonable, so when he declared that he wanted her to have a proper wedding and no rushed affair, she sleepily had said, "Yes. Yes. A proper wedding, darling." To which he'd added, "With a proper gown for you. Flowers and attendants. A church. A photographer. A reception. I want to celebrate, Jill." Which, of course, he could not do if they had to shoehorn the planning into the seven months before the baby's birth. And even if they were able to manage that, no amount of shoe horning would fit her into an elegant wedding gown once she had a bump. It was so practical to wait. In fact, Jill realised as she thought about it, Richard had led her right up to the idea so that when he said at the conclusion of her recitation of everything that had to be done in order to produce the kind of wedding he wanted her to have, "I'd no idea how many months .. . Will you be comfortable, Jill, with a wedding that far along into your pregnancy?" she'd been more than ready for his next line of thinking. "No one ought to enjoy the day more than you. And as you're so small .. ." He put his hand on her stomach as if for emphasis. It was flat and taut, but it wouldn't be, soon. "D'you think we ought to wait?" he'd suggested. Why not, she'd thought. She'd waited thirty-seven years for her wedding day. There was no problem waiting a few months more. But that had been before Gideon's troubles had taken up primary residence in Richard's mind. And Gideon's troubles had brought on Eugenie. Jill could see now that Richard's preoccupation after Wigmore Hall may have had a secondary source beyond his son's failure to perform that night. And when she set that secondary source next to his apparent reluctance to marry, she felt an uneasiness creep over her, like a fog bank gliding noiselessly onto an unsuspecting shore. She blamed her mother for this. Dora Foster was happy enough to be on the road to having her first grandchild, but she wasn't pleased with Jill's choice of father although she knew better than to say so directly. Still, she would feel the need to voice her objections subtly, and what better way than to create an inroad in Jill's implicit faith in Richard's honour. Not that she actually thought in terms of a man doing 'the honourable thing'. She didn't, after all, live in a Hardy novel. When she thought of honour, she merely thought of a man telling the truth about his actions and intentions. Richard said they would marry; ergo, they would. They could have married at once, of course, once she'd become pregnant. She wouldn't have minded. It was, after all, marriage and children that she'd placed on her list as having to accomplish by her thirty-fifth birthday. She'd never written the word wedding and she had seen a wedding only as one of the means she could use to achieve her end. Indeed, had she not been so blissful there in bed after their lovemaking, she probably would have said, "Bother the wedding, Richard. Let's marry now," and he would have agreed. Wouldn't he? she wondered. Just as he'd agreed to the name she'd chosen for the baby? Just as he'd agreed to her mother's delivering the baby? Just as he'd agreed to selling her flat first instead of his? To buying that house she'd found in Harrow? To simply going with the estate agent to at least take a look at that house? What did it mean that Richard was thwarting her at every turn, thwarting her in the most reasonable of fashions, making it seem as if every decision they reached was reached mutually and not a case of her giving in because she was .. . What? Afraid? And if so, of what? And the answer was there even though the woman was dead, even though she could not come back to harm them, to stand in the way, to prevent what was meant to be ... The phone rang. Jill started. She looked round, dazed at first. So deep into her thoughts had she been that she wasn't aware for a moment that she was still in the kitchen and the cordless phone was somewhere in the sitting room. She lumbered to get it. "Is this Miss Foster?" a woman's voice said. It was a professional voice, a competent voice, a voice such as Jill's own once had been. Jill said, "Yes." "Miss Jill Foster?" "Yes. Yes. Who is this please?" And the answer fractured Jill's world into pieces. There was something about the way Noreen McKay made the statement "I can't clear her name' that gave Nkata pause before lighting the fireworks of celebration. There was a desperation behind the deputy warden's eyes and an incipient panic in the manner in which she downed the rest of her drink in a gulp. He said, "Can't or won't clear her name, Miss McKay?" She said, "I have two teenage children to consider. They're all I have left as family. I don't want a custody battle with their father." "Courts're more liberal these days." "I also have a career. It's not the one I wanted, but it's the one I've got. The one I've made for myself. Don't you see? If it comes to light that I ever She stopped herself. Nkata sighed. He couldn't take ever to the bank and deposit it, one way or the other. He said, "She was with you, then. Three nights back? Last night as well? Late last night?" Noreen McKay blinked. She was sitting so straight and tall in her chair that she looked like a cardboard cut-out of herself. "Miss McKay, I got to know whether I c'n cross her name off." "And I've got to know whether I can trust you. The fact that you've come here, right to the prison itself.. . Don't you see what that suggests?" "Suggests I'm busy. Suggests it doesn't make sense for me to go driving back and forth 'cross London when you're .. . what ... a mile? two miles? from Harriet Lewis's office." "It suggests more than that," Noreen McKay said. "It tells me that you're self-interested, Constable, and if you're self-interested, what's to prevent you from passing on my name to a snout, for a nice fifty quid? Or from being the snout yourself, for fifty more? It's a good story to sell to the Mail. You've threatened worse already in this conversation." "I could do that now, comes down to it. You given me enough already, you have." "I've given you what? The fact that a solicitor and her client came to my house one evening? What do you expect the Mail to do with that?" Nkata had to acknowledge that Noreen McKay was making a good point. There was hardly seed for anyone's planting in what little information he had. There was, however, what he knew already and what he could assume from what he knew and what he ultimately could do with that. But the truth of the matter, however reluctantly he admitted it to himself, was that he actually needed from her only confirmation and a period of time to go with that confirmation. As for the rest of it, all the whys and the wherefores .. . If the truth were told, he wanted them, but he did not need them, not professionally. He said, "The hit and run in Hampstead happened round half ten or eleven th' other night. Harriet Lewis says you c'n give Katja Wolff an alibi for the time. She also says you won't, which's what makes me think you and Katja got something between yourselves that's going to make one of you look bad if it gets out." "I've said: I'm not going to talk about that." "I get that, Miss McKay. Loud and clear. So what about you talking about what you're willing to talk about. What about bare facts with no window dressing on them?" "What do you mean?" "Yesses and nos." Noreen McKay glanced over at the bar, where her colleagues were downing pints of Guinness. The pub door opened, and three more prison employees walked in, all of them women in uniforms similar to the deputy warden's. Two of them called out to her and looked as if they were considering a saunter over for an introduction to McKay's companion. Noreen turned from them abruptly and said in a low voice, "This is impossible. I shouldn't have .. . We've got to get out of here." "You running out wouldn't look so good," Nkata murmured. "Especially when I jump up and start shouting your name. But yesses and nos, and I'm gone, Miss McKay. Quiet as a mouse and you c'n tell them I'm anyone. Truant officer come to talk about your kids. Scout for Manchester United interested in the boy. I don't care. Just yesses and nos, and you got your life back, whatever it is." "You don't know what it is." "Course. Like I said. Whatever it is." She stared at him for a moment before saying, "All right. Ask." "Was she with you three nights ago?" "Yes." "Between ten and midnight?" "Yes." "What time d'she leave?" "We said yesses or nos." "Right. Yeah. She leave before midnight?" "No." "She arrive before ten?" "Yes." "She come alone?" "Yes." "Missus Edwards know where she was?" Noreen McKay moved her gaze at this question, but it didn't appear to be because she was about to lie. "No," she said. "And last night?" "What about last night?" "Katja Wolff with you last night? Say, after her solicitor left?" Noreen McKay looked back at him. "Yes." "She stay? Was she there round half eleven, midnight?" "Yes. She left ... It was probably half past one when she left." "You know Missus Edwards?" Her gaze moved again. He saw a muscle tighten in her jaw. She said, "Yes. Yes, I know Yasmin Edwards. She served most of her time in Hollo way." "You know she and Katja ' "Yes." "Then what're you doing mixed up with them?" he asked abruptly, abjuring the previous yesses and nos in a sudden need for weapons, a personal need that he could barely acknowledge let alone begin to understand. "You got some sort of plan, you and Katja? You two using her and her boy for some reason?" She looked at him but did not reply. He said, These're people, Miss McKay. They got lives and they got feelings. If you and Katja're planning to put something down to Yasmin, like laying a trail to her door, making her look bad, putting her at risk ' Noreen snapped forward, saying in a hiss, "Isn't it obvious that just the opposite has happened? I look bad. I'm at risk. And why? Because I love her, Constable. That's my sin. You think this is about quirky sex, don't you? The abuse of power. Coercion leading to perversion, and nauseating scenes of desperate women with dildos strapped to their hips mounting desperate women behind bars. But what you don't think is that this is complicated, that it has to do with loving someone but not being able to love her openly so loving her the only way I can and having to know that on the nights we're apart which are far more than we're together, believe me she's with someone else, loving someone else, or at least playing at it because that's what I want. And every argument we ever have has no solution because both of us are right in the choices we've made. I can't give her what she wants from me, and I can't accept what she wants to give. So she gives it elsewhere and I take scraps from her and she takes scraps from me, and that's how it is, no matter what she says about how and when and for whom things will change." She leaned back in her chair after the speech, her breath coming jerkily as she fumbled her way into her navy coat once more. She got to her feet and headed for the door. Nkata followed her. Outside, the wind was blowing ferociously, and Noreen McKay was standing in it. She was breathing like a runner in the light from a street lamp, one hand curled round the pole. She was looking at Holloway Prison across the street. She appeared to feel, rather than to see, Nkata come up next to her. She didn't look at him when she spoke. "At first, I was just curious about her. They put her in the medical unit after her trial, which is where I was assigned back then. She was on suicide watch. But I could tell that she had no intention of harming herself. There was this resolve about her, this knowing completely who she was. And I found that attractive, compelling really, because while I knew who I was as well, I'd never been able to admit it to myself. Then she went to the pregnancy unit and she could have gone to the mother-and-baby unit after the child was born, but she didn't want that, she didn't want him, and I found that I needed to know what she wanted and what she was made of that she could exist so sure and so alone." Nkata said nothing. He blocked some of the wind with his back as he positioned himself before the deputy warden. "So I just watched her. She was in jeopardy, of course, once she was off the medical unit. There's a form of honour among them, and the worst in their eyes is the killer of babies, so she wasn't safe unless she was with other Category One offenders. But she didn't care that she wasn't safe, and that fascinated me. I thought at first it was because she saw her life as over, and I wanted to talk to her about that. I called it my duty and since I was in charge of the Samaritans at that point ' "Samaritans?" Nkata asked. "We have a programme of visits for them here at the prison. If a prisoner wishes to participate, she tells the staff member in charge." "Katja wanted to participate?" "No. Never. But I used that as an excuse to talk to her." She examined Nkata's face and seemed to read something into his expression because she went on with, "I am good at my job. We've got twelve-step programmes now. We've got an increase in visits. We've got better rehabilitation and easier means for families to see mothers who're doing time. I am good at my job." She looked away from him, into the street where the evening traffic was pouring out towards the northern suburbs. She said, "She didn't want any of it, and I couldn't understand why. She'd fought deportation to Germany, and I couldn't understand why. She talked to no one unless spoken to first. But all the time she watched. And so she eventually saw me watching her. When I was assigned to her wing this is later we started talking. She went first, which surprised me. She said, "Why do you watch me?" I remember that. And what followed. I remember that also." "She's holding all the cards, Miss McKay," Nkata noted. "This isn't about blackmail, Constable. Katja could destroy me, but I know she won't." "Why?" "There are things you just know." "We're talking 'bout a lag." "We're talking about Katja." The deputy warden pushed away from the street lamp and approached the traffic lights that would allow her to cross the road and return to the prison. Nkata walked beside her. She said, "I knew what I was from an early age. I expect my parents knew as well when I played dressing up and dressed like a soldier, a pirate, a fireman. But never like a princess or a nurse or a mum. And that's not normal, is it, and when at last you're fifteen, all you want is what's normal. So I tried it: short skirts, high heels, low necklines, the whole bit. I went after men and I shagged every boy I could get my hands on. Then one day in the paper I saw an ad for women looking for women and I phoned a number. For a joke, I told myself. Just for a lark. We met at a health club and had a swim and went out for coffee and then went to her place. She was twenty-four. I was nineteen. We were together five years, till I went into the prison service. And then ... I couldn't live that life. It felt like too much of a risk. And then my sister got Hodgkin's and I got her children and for a long time that was enough." "Till Katja." "I've had scores of bed mates in the form of men, but only two lovers, both of them women. Katja's one of them." "For how long?" "Seventeen years. Off and on." "You mean to go on like this forever?" "With Yasmin in the middle, d'you mean?" She glanced at Nkata, seeming to try to read an answer in his silence. "If it can be said that we choose where we love, then I chose Katja for two reasons. She never spoke about what put her in prison, so I knew she could hold her tongue about me. And she had an enormous secret she was keeping, which I thought at the time was a lover outside prison. I'll be safe getting involved, I thought. When she leaves, she'll go to her or to him, and I'll have had the chance to get this out of my system so I can live the rest of my life celibate but still knowing I once had something.. ." The traffic light in Parkhurst Road changed, and the walking figure altered along with it from red to green. Noreen stepped off the pavement, but looked back over her shoulder as she made a final comment, "It's been seventeen years, Constable. She's the only prisoner I ever touched .. . that way. She's the only woman I've ever loved .. . this way." "Why?" he asked as she began to cross the street. "Because she's safe," Noreen McKay said in parting. "And because she's strong. No one can break Katja Wolff." "Bloody hell. This is just brilliant," Barbara Havers muttered. She was beginning to feel the peril of her own situation: Two months demoted for insubordination and assault on a superior officer, she couldn't afford yet another pot hole on the ill-paved road of her career. "If Leach tells Hillier about that computer, we're done for, Inspector. You know that, don't you?" "We're only done for if there's something useful to the investigation on the computer," Lynley pointed out as he nosed the Bentley into the heavy evening traffic of Rosslyn Hill. "And there isn't, Havers." His utter calm rubbed against the sore of Barbara's apprehension. Their progress to his car had been so rapid after leaving Leach's office that she hadn't had a chance for a cigarette, and she was itching for a hit of tobacco to steady her nerves, which made her irritable as well as afraid. "You know that, do you?" she asked him. "And what about those letters? From the superintendent to her? If we need those letters to build a case against Richard Davies .. . for why he went after Webberly ... for why he made it look like Wolff was after people.. ." She ran her hand through her hair and felt it bristle. She needed to cut it. She'd do that tonight, take the nail scissors to it and do a proper job. Maybe she'd hack it all off and punk it up with hair goo. That should serve to distract AC Hillier from the role she'd played in evidence tampering. "You can't have it all ways," Lynley said. "What's that s'posed to mean when it's home with its mother?" "He can't have killed Eugenie because she threatened Gideon's career, Havers, and then gone after Webberly because he'd been harbouring jealousy over his affair with Eugenie. If you go that direction, where does that put Kathleen Waddington?" "So maybe I'm wrong about Gideon's career," she said. "Maybe he ran down Eugenie because she'd taken up with Webberly." "No. You're right. His objective was Eugenie, the only person he killed. But he went after Webberly and Waddington as well to focus our attention onto Katja Wolff." Lynley sounded so certain, so completely unfazed by the danger they were in, that Barbara wanted to smack him. He could afford to be unruffled, she decided. Out from New Scotland Yard on his ear, he'd just motor down to the family pile in Cornwall and live out his days like the landed gentry. She, on the other hand, didn't have that option. "You sound dead bloody sure of yourself," she groused. "Davies had the letter, Havers." "What letter?" she demanded. "The letter telling him Katja Wolff was out of prison. He knew I'd suspect her once he showed me that letter." "So he knocks down the superintendent and this Waddington bird to make it look like Eugenie's death was for revenge? Katja going after the crowd who sent her away?" "That's my guess." "But maybe it is revenge, Inspector. Not Katja's but his. P'rhaps he knew about Eugenie and Webberly. P'rhaps he's always known but just bided his time and eaten himself up with jealousy and vowed that someday ' "It doesn't work, Havers. Webberly's letters to Eugenie Davies are addressed to Henley. They all postdate her separation from her husband. Davies had no reason to be jealous. He probably never even knew about them." "So why choose Webberly? Why not someone else from the trial? The Crown Prosecutor, the judge, another witness." "I expect Webberly was easier to locate. He's lived in the same house for twenty-five years." "But Davies has to know where the others lived if he found Waddington." "What others do you mean?" "The people who testified against her. Robson, for instance. What about Robson?" "Robson served Gideon. He told me that himself. I don't see Davies doing anything that might hurt his son, do you? Your entire scenario -the one you came up with in Leach's office depends on the contention that Davies acted to save his son." "Okay. All right. Maybe I'm wrong. Maybe it's all to do with Eugenie and Webberly and their affair. Maybe the letters and the computer are pieces of evidence we could've used to prove it. And maybe we're buggered." He glanced over at her. "Barbara, we're not." Lynley looked at her hands and she realised she was actually wringing them, like the unfortunate, impotent heroine in a melodrama featuring Simon Legree. He said, "Have one." She said, "What?" "A cigarette. Have one. You're owed. I can cope." He even punched in the Bentley's cigarette lighter, and when it popped out, he handed it over, saying, "Light up. This is a situation you're not likely to find yourself in again." "I bloody well hope not," Havers muttered. He shot her a look. "I was talking about smoking in the Bentley, Barbara." "Yeah. Well, I wasn't." She dug out her Players and used the hot coil of the lighter against one. She inhaled deeply and grudgingly thanked her superior for humouring her vice for once. They inched their way south along the high street and Lynley glanced at his pocket watch. He handed his mobile over to Barbara and said, "Phone St. James and ask him to have the computer ready." Barbara was about to do as he asked when the mobile rang in her hand. She flipped it on and Lynley nodded at her to take the call, so she said, "Havers here." "Constable?" It was DCI Leach, speaking not so much in a tone as in a snarl. "Where the hell are you?" "Heading to fetch the computer, sir." Leach, she mouthed to Lynley, in another twist. "Bugger the computer," Leach said. "Get over to Portman Street. Between Oxford Street and Portman Square. You'll see the action when you get there." "Portman Street?" Barbara said. "But, sir, don't you want ' "Is your hearing as bad as your judgement?" "I ' "We've got another hit and run," Leach snapped. "What? Barbara said. "Another? Who is it?" "Richard Davies. But there're witnesses this time. And I want you and Lynley over there shaking the lot of them through a sieve before they disappear." Gideon 10 NOVEMBER Confrontation is the only answer. He has lied to me. For nearly three quarters of my life, my father has lied. He's lied not with what he said but with what he's allowed me to believe by saying nothing for twenty years: that we he and I were the injured parties when my mother left us. But all the time the truth was that she left us because she'd realised why Katja had murdered my sister and why she kept silent about having done so. 11 NOVEMBER So this is how it happened, Dr. Rose. No memories now, if you will forgive me, no travelling back through time. Just, this: I phoned him. I said, "I know why Sonia died. I know why Katja refused to talk. You bastard, Dad." He said nothing. I said, "I know why my mother left us. I know what happened. Do you understand me? Say something, Dad. It's time for the truth. I know what happened." I could hear Jill's voice in the background. I could hear her question, and both the tone and the manner of her question" Richard Darling, who on earth is it?" told me something of Dad's reaction to what I was saying. So I was not surprised when he said harshly, "I'm coming over there. Don't leave the house." How he got to me so quickly, I don't know. All I can say is that when he entered the house and came up the stairs at a decisive pace, it seemed that mere minutes had passed since I had rung off from our conversation. But I'd seen the two of them in those minutes: Katja Wolff who grabbed at life, who used a deadly threat to get out of East Germany and who would have used death itself if necessary to achieve the end that she had in mind, and my father who had impregnated her, perhaps in the hope of producing a perfect specimen to carry on a family line that began with himself. He, after all, discarded women when they failed to produce something healthy. He'd done that to his first wife, and he'd been more than likely setting up to do the same to my mother. But he hadn't been moving fast enough for Katja, Katja who grabbed at life and who did not wait for what life provided her. They argued about it. When will you tell her about us, Richard? When the time is right. But we have no time! You know we have no time. Katja, don't act like an hysterical fool. And then, when the moment came when he could have taken a stand, he wouldn't speak up to defend her, excuse her, or commit himself as my mother confronted the German girl with the fact of her pregnancy and with the fact of her failure to perform her duties towards my sister because of her pregnancy. So Katja had finally taken matters into her own hands. Exhausted with arguing and with attempting to defend herself, ill from her pregnancy, and feeling deeply betrayed on all sides, she had snapped. She had drowned Sonia. What did she hope to gain? Perhaps she hoped to free my father from a burden she believed was keeping them apart. Perhaps she saw droivning Sonia as her way of making a statement that needed to be made. Perhaps she wished to punish my mother for having a hold on my father that seemed unbreakable. But kill Sonia she did and then she refused, by means of a stoic silence, to acknowledge her crime, my sister's brief life, or what sins of her own had led to the taking of that life. Why, though? Because she was protecting the man she loved? Or because she was punishing him? All this I saw and all this I thought as I waited for my father's arrival. "What is this cock, Gideon?" Those were his first words to me as he strode into the music room where I was sitting in the window seat fighting off the first tentative stabs in my gut that proclaimed me frightened, childish, and cowardly as the time for our final engagement approached. I gestured to the notebook I'd been writing in all these weeks and I hated the fact that my voice was strained. I hated what that strain revealed: about myself, about him, about what I feared. "I know what happened. I've remembered what happened." "Have you picked up your instrument?" "You thought I wouldn't work it out, didn't you?" "Have you picked up the Guarnerius, Gideon?" "You thought you could pretend for the rest of your life." "Damn it. Have you played? Have you tried to play? Have you even looked at your violin?" "You thought I'd do what I've always done." "I've had enough of this." He began to move, but not to the violin case. Instead, he walked to the stereo system, and as he did so he removed a new CD from his pocket. "You thought I'd go along with something you told me because that's what I've always done, right? Throw out anything that resembles an acceptable tale and he'll swallow it: hook, line, and sinker." He swung round. "You don't know what you're talking about. Look at yourself. Look what she's done to you with all this psycho-mumbo-jumbo of hers. You've been reduced to a pulling mouse afraid of his shadow." "Isn't that what you've done, Dad? Isn't that what you did back then? You lied, you cheated, you betrayed ' "Enough!" He was battling to free the CD from its wrapping, and he tore at it with his teeth like a dog, spitting the shreds of cellophane onto the floor. "I'm telling you now that there's one way to deal with this, and it's the way you should have dealt with it from the first. A real man faces his fear head on. He doesn't turn tail and run from it." "You're running. Right now." "Like bloody God damn hell I am." He punched the button to open the CD player. He jammed the compact disk inside. He hit play and twisted the volume knob. "You listen," he hissed. "You bloody well listen. And act like a man." He'd turned up the sound so high that when the music started, I didn't know what it was at first. But my confusion lasted only for a second because he'd chosen it, Dr. Rose. Beethoven. The Archduke. He'd chosen it. The Allegro Moderato began. And it swelled round the room. And over it I could hear Dad's shout. "Listen. Listen. Listen to what's unmade you, Gideon. Listen to what you're terrified to play." I covered my ears. "I can't." But still I heard. It. I heard it. And I heard him above it. Listen to what you're letting control you. Listen to what you've let a simple bloody piece of music do to your entire career." "I don't ' "Black smudges on a damn piece of paper. That's all it is. That's what you've surrendered your power to." "Don't make me ' "Stop it. Listen. Is it impossible for a musician like you to play this piece? No, it's not. Is it too difficult? It is not. Is it even challenging? No, no, no. Is it mildly, remotely, or vaguely ' "Dad!" I pressed my hands to my ears. The room was going black. It was shrinking to a pinpoint of light and the light was blue, it was blue, it was blue. "What it is is weakness made flesh in you, Gideon. You had a bout of nerves and you've transformed yourself into flaming Raphael Robson. That's what you've done." The piano introduction was nearly complete. The violin was due to begin. I knew the notes. The music was in me. But in front of my eyes I saw only that door. And Dad my father continued to rail. "I'm surprised you haven't started sweating like him. That's where you'll be next. Sweating and shaking like a freak who can't ' "Stop it!" And the music. The music. The music. Swelling, exploding, demanding. All round me, the music that I dreaded and feared. And in front of me the door, with her standing there on the steps that lead up to it, with the light shining down on her, a woman I wouldn't have known in the street, a woman whose accent has faded in time, in the twenty years she has spent in prison. She says, "Do you remember me, Gideon? It is Katja Wolff. I must speak with you." I say politely because I do not know who she is but I have been taught through the years to be polite to the public no matter the demands they make upon me because it is the public who attend my concerts who buy my recordings who support the East London Conservatory and what it is trying to do to better the lives of impoverished children children like me in so many ways save for the circumstances of birth .. . I say, "I'm afraid I have a concert, Madam." "This will not take long." She descends the steps. She crosses the bit of Welbeck Way that separates us. I've moved to the red double doors of the artists' entrance to Wigmore Hall and I'm about to knock to gain admittance when she says she says oh God she says, "I've come for payment, Gideon," and I do not know what she means. But somehow I understand that danger is about to engulf me. I clutch the case in which the Guarneri is protected by leather and velvet, and I say, "As I said, I do have a concert." "Not for more than an hour," she says. "This I have been told in the front." She nods towards Wigmore Street where the box office is, where she apparently has gone at first to seek me out. They would have told her that the performers for the evening had not yet arrived, Madam, and that when they do arrive, they use the back entrance and not the front. So if she cared to wait there, she might have the opportunity to speak to Mr. Davies although the box office couldn't guarantee that Mr. Davies would have the time to speak to her. She says, "Four hundred thousand pounds, Gideon. Your father claims he does not have it. So I come to you because I know that you must." And the world as I know it is shrinking shrinking disappearing entirely into a single bead of light. From that bead grows sound and I hear the Beethoven, the Allegro Moderato, The Archduke's first movement, and then Dad's voice. He said, "Act like a man, for the love of God. Sit up. Stand up. Stop cowering there like a beaten dog! Jesus'. Stop snivelling. "You're acting like this is ' I heard no more because I knew suddenly what all of this was, and I knew what this had always been. I remembered it all in a piece like the music itself and the music was the background and the act that went with that music as background was what I had forced myself to forget. I am in my room. Raphael is displeased, more displeased than he has ever been and he has been displeased, on edge, anxious, nervous, and irritable for days. I have been petulant and uncooperative. Juilliard has been denied me. Juilliard has been listed among the impossibilities that I am growing used to hearing about. This isn't possible, that isn't possible, trim here, cut there, make allowances for. So I'll show them, I decide. I won't play this stupid violin again. I won't practise. I won't have lessons. I won't perform in public. I won't perform in private, for myself or for anyone. I will show them. So Raphael marches me to my room. He puts on the recording of The Archduke and says, "I'm losing patience with you, Gideon. This is not a difficult piece. I want you to listen to the first movement till you can hum it in your sleep." He leaves me, shuts the door. And the Allegro Moderato begins. I say, "I won't, I won't, I won't!" And I upset a table and kick over a chair and slam my body into the door. "You can't make me!" I shout. "You can't make me do anything!" And the music swells. The piano introduces the melody. All is hushed and ready for the violin and cello. Mine is not a difficult part to learn, not for someone with natural gifts like myself. But what will be the point of learning it when I cannot go to Juilliard? Although Perlman did. As a boy, he went there. But I will not. And this is unfair. This is bloody unfair. Everything about my world is unfair. I will not do this. I will not accept this. And the music swells. I fling open my door. I shout, "No!" and I won't!" into the corridor. I think someone will come, will march me somewhere and administer discipline but no one comes because they are all busy with their own concerns and not with mine. And I'm angry at this because it is my world that is being affected. It is my life that is being moulded. It is my will that is being thwarted and I want to punch my fist into the wall. And the music swells. And the violin soars. And I will not play this piece of music at Juilliard or anywhere else because I must remain here. In this house where we're all prisoners. Because of her. The knob is under my hand before I realise it, the panels of the door inches from my face. I will burst in and frighten her. I will make her cry. I will make her pay. I will make them pay. She isn't frightened. But she is alone. Alone in the tub with the yellow ducklings bobbing nearby and a bright red boat that she's slapping at happily with her fist. And she deserves to be frightened, to be thrashed, to be made to understand what she's done to me, so I grab her and shove her beneath the water and see her eyes widen and widen and widen and feel her struggle to sit up again. And the music that music swells and swells. On and on it goes. For minutes. For days. And then Katja is there. She screams my name. And Raphael is right behind her yes, because yes, I understand it all now: They have been talking the two of them talking, which is why Sonia has been left alone, and he has been demanding to know if what Sarah-Jane Beckett has whispered is true. Because he has a right to know, he says. He says this as he enters the bathroom on Katja's heels. It is what he's saying as he enters and she screams. He says, '.. . because if you are, it's mine and you know it. I do have the right ' And the music swells. And Katja screams, screams for my father and Raphael shouts, "Oh my God! Oh my God' but I do not release her. I do not release her even then because I know that the end of my world began with her. Chapter Twenty-Four Jill staggered to her bedroom. Her movements were clumsy. She was hampered by her size. She flung open the cupboard that held her clothes, thinking only, Richard, oh my God, Richard, and coming round to wonder wildly what she was doing standing incoherently in front of a rack of garments. All she could think was her lover's name. All she could feel was a mixture of terror and a profound self-hatred at the doubts she'd had, doubts that she'd been harbouring and nursing at the very moment that .. . that what? What had happened to him? "Is he alive?" she'd cried into the telephone when the voice asked if she was Miss Foster, Miss Jill Foster, the woman whose name Richard carried in his wallet in the event that something .. . "My God, what's happened?" Jill had continued. "Miss Foster, if you'll come to the hospital," the Voice had said. "Do you need a taxi? Shall I phone one for you? If you'll give me an address, I can ring a mini cab." The idea of waiting five minutes or ten or fifteen for a cab was inconceivable. Jill dropped the telephone and stumbled for her coat. Her coat. That was it. She'd come into her bedroom in search of her coat. She shoved through the hanging garments in the cupboard till her hands came into contact with cashmere. She jerked this from its hanger and struggled into it. She fumbled with the horn buttons, miscalculated where they went, and didn't bother to refasten them more precisely when the hem of the coat hung like a lopsided curtain upon her. From her chest of drawers, she took a scarf the first one that came to hand, it didn't matter and she wrapped this round her throat. She slammed a black wool cap on her head and snatched up her shoulder bag. She went for the door. In the lift, she punched for the underground car park, and she willed the little cubicle downwards without its stopping at any other floors. She told herself that it was a good sign the hospital had rung her and asked her to come. If the news was bad, if the situation was could she risk the word?-fatal, they wouldn't have rung her at all, would they? Wouldn't they instead have sent a constable round to speak to her? So what it meant that they had phoned was that he was alive. He was alive. She found herself making bargains with God as she pushed through the doors to the car park. If Richard would live, if his heart or whatever it was would mend, then she would compromise on the baby's name. They would christen her Cara Catherine. Richard could call her Cara at home behind closed doors, among the family, and Jill herself would call her the same. Then outside in the world at large, both of them could refer to her as Catherine. They'd register her at school as Catherine. Her friends would call her Catherine. And Cara would be even more special because it would be what only her parents called her. That was fair, wasn't it, God? If only Richard would live. The car was parked seven bays along. She unlocked it, praying that it would start and for the first time seeing the wisdom in having something modern and reliable. But the Humber loomed large in her past her granddad had been its single devoted owner and when he'd left the vehicle to her in his will, she'd kept it out of love for him and in memory of the countryside drives they'd taken together. Her friends had laughed at it in earlier years and Richard had lectured her about its dangers no airbags, no headrests, no seatbelts but Jill had stubbornly continued to drive it and had no intention of giving it up. "It's safer than what's on the streets these days," she'd declared loyally whenever Richard had attempted to wrestle from her a promise not to drive it. "It's like a tank." "Just stay out of it till you've had the baby and promise me you won't let Cara anywhere near it," he had replied. Catherine, she had thought. Her name is Catherine. But that was before. That was when she thought nothing could happen in an instant the way things happened: things like this that changed everything, making what had seemed so important yesterday less than a bagatelle today. Still, she'd made the promise not to drive the Humber and she'd kept that promise for the last two months. So she had added reason to wonder if it would start. It did. Like a dream. But the increase in Jill's size required her to make an adjustment to the heavy front seat. She reached forward and beneath it for the metal lever. She flipped it up and shifted her weight. The seat wouldn't budge. She said, "Damn it. Come on," and tried again. But either the device itself had corroded over the years or something was blocking the track on which the enormous seat ran. Her anxiety rising, she scrabbled her fingers on the floor beneath her. She felt the lever, then the edge of the lever. She felt the seat springs. She felt the track. And then she found it. Something hard and thin and rectangular was blocking the old metal track, wedged in in such a way as to make it virtually immovable. She frowned. She pulled on the object. She jockeyed it back and forth when it got stuck. She cursed. Her hands became damp with sweat. And finally, finally, she managed to dislodge it. She slid it out, lifted it, and laid it on the broad seat next to her. It was a photograph, she saw, a picture in a stark, monastic, wooden frame. Gideon 11 NOVEMBER I ran, Dr. Rose. I bolted for the music room door and crashed down the stairs. I flung myself into Chalcot Square. I didn't know where I was going or what I intended to do. But I had to be away from my father and away from what he'd inadvertently forced me to face. I ran blindly, but I saw her face. Not as she might have looked in joy or innocence or even in suffering, but in losing consciousness as I drowned her. I saw her head turn side to side, her baby's hair fan out, her mouth gulp fish like her eyes roll back and disappear. She fought to stay alive but she couldn't match the strength of my rage. I held her down and held her down, and when Katja and Raphael burst into the room, she was no longer moving or struggling against me. But still my rage was not satisfied. My feet pounded the pavement as I tore along the square. I did not head for Primrose Hill, for Primrose Hill is exposed and exposure to anything, anyone, any longer was an unbearable thought to me. So I thundered in another direction, veering round the first corner I came to, charging through the silent neighbourhood till I burst into the upper reaches of Regent's Park Road. Moments later, I heard him shouting my name. As I stood panting at the junction where Regent's Park and Gloucester Roads meet, he came round the corner, holding his side against a stitch. He raised his arm. He shouted, "Wait!" I ran again. What I thought as I ran was a simple phrase: He's always known. For I remembered more, and I saw what I remembered as a series of images. Katja screams and shrieks. Raphael pushes past her to get to me. Shouts and footsteps rise up the stairs and along the corridor. A voice cries out, "God damn it!" Dad is in the bathroom. He tries to pull me away from the tub where my fingers have dug and dug and dug into my sister's fragile shoulders. He shouts my name and slaps my face. He yanks me by the hair, and I finally release her. "Get him out of here!" he roars, and for the first time he sounds just like Granddad and I am frightened. As Raphael jerks me into the corridor, I hear others on their way. My mother is calling, "Richard? Richard?" as she runs up the stairs. Sarah-Jane Beckett and James the Lodger are talking to each other as they hurry down from above. Somewhere Granddad is bellowing, "Dick! Where's my whisky? Dick!" And Gran is calling out fearfully from below, "Has something happened to Jack?" Then Sarah-Jane Beckett is with me, saying, "What's happened? What's going on?" She takes me from Raphael's fierce grip, saying, "Raphael, what are you doing to him?" and "What on earth is she going on about?" in reference to Katja Wolff, who is weeping and saying, "I do not leave her. For a minute only," to which comment Raphael Robson is adding nothing at all. After that, I am in my room. I hear Dad cry, "Don't come in here, Eugenie. Dial nine-nine-nine." She says, "What's happened? Sosy! What's happened?" A door shuts. Katja weeps. Raphael says, "Let me take her downstairs." Sarah-Jane Beckett goes to stand at the door to my room, where she listens, her head bent, and there she remains. I sit against the headboard of the bed, arms wet to the elbows, shaking now, finally aware of the terrible enormity of what I have done. And all along the music has played, that same music, the cursed Archduke that has haunted and pursued me like a relentless demon for the last twenty years. That is what I remembered as I ran, and when I crossed the junction, I did not attempt to avoid the traffic. It seemed to me that the only mercy would be if a car or lorry struck me. None did. I made it to the other side. But Dad was hard on my heels, still shouting my name. I set off again running, running away from him, running into the past. And I saw that past like a kaleidoscope of pictures: that genial ginger-haired policeman who smelled of cigars and spoke in a kindly paternal voice .. . that night in bed with my mother holding me holding me holding me and my face pressed firmly into her breasts as if she would do to me what I had done to my sister.. . my father sitting on the edge of my bed, his hands on my shoulders as my hands were on hers .. . his voice saying, "You're quite safe, Gideon, no one will harm you,".. . Raphael with flowers, flowers for my mother, flowers of sympathy to assuage her grief.. . and always hushed voices, in every room, for days on end .. . finally Sarah-Jane leaves the door where she has stood motionless, waiting and listening. She walks to the tape player, where the violin in the Beethoven trio is executing a passage of double stops She punches a button and the music blessedly ceases, leaving behind a silence so hollow that I wish only for the music again. Into this silence comes the sound of sirens. They grow louder and louder as the vehicles approach. Although it's probably taken them minutes, it seems like an hour since Dad yanked on my hair and forced me to release the grip I had on my sister. "Up here, in here," Dad shouts down the stairs as someone lets the paramedics into the house. And then begins the effort to save what cannot be saved, what I know cannot be saved because I was the one who destroyed her. I can't bear the images, the thoughts, the sounds. I ran blindly, wildly, without caring where I was going. I crossed the street and came to my senses directly in front of the Pembroke Castle pub. And beyond it I saw the terrace where the drinkers sit in summer, the terrace that was empty now, but bordered by a wall, a low brick wall onto which I leapt, along which I ran, and from which I sprang, sprang without thinking onto the iron archway of the pedestrian footbridge that spans the railway line thirty feet beneath it. I sprang thinking, This is it how it will be. I heard the train before I saw it. In the hearing, I took my answer. The train wasn't travelling fast, so the engineer would well be able to stop it and I would not die.. . unless I timed my jump with precision. I moved to the edge of the arch. I saw the train. I watched its approach. "Gideon!" Dad was at the end of the footbridge. "Stay where you are!" he shouted. "It's too late." And like a baby, I began to cry, and I waited for the moment, the perfect moment, when I could drop onto the tracks in front of the train and enter oblivion. "What are you saying?" he shouted. "Too late for what?" "I know what I did," I cried. "To Sonia. I remember." "You remember what?" He looked from me to the train, both of us watching its steady approach. He took a single step closer to me. "You know. What I did. That night. To Sonia. How she died. You know what I did to Sonia." "No! Wait!" This as I moved my feet so that the soles of my shoes overhung the drop. "Don't do this, Gideon. Tell me what you think happened." "I drowned her, Dad! I drowned my sister!" He took another step towards me, his hand extended. The train drew closer. Twenty seconds and it would be over. Twenty seconds and a debt would be paid. "Stay where you are! For the love of God, Gideon!" "I drowned her!" I cried, and my breath caught on a sob. "I drowned her and I didn't even remember. Do you know what that means? Do you know how it feels?" His glance went to the train then back to me. He took another step forward. "Don't!" he shouted. "Listen to me. You didn't kill your sister." "You pulled me off her. I remember now. And that's why Mother left. She left us without a word because she knew what I'd done. Isn't that right? Isn't that the truth?" "No! No, it's not!" "It is. I remember." "Listen to me. Wait." His words were rapid. "You hurt her, yes. And yes, yes, she was unconscious. But, Gideon, son, hear what I'm saying. You didn't drown Sonia." "Then who ' "I did." "I don't believe you." I looked beneath me, to the waiting rail tracks. A single step was all I needed to take, and I would be on the tracks and a moment later it would all be over. A burst of pain then a wiping of the slate. "Look at me, Gideon. For God's sake, hear me out. Don't do this before you understand what happened." "You're trying to stall." "If I am, there'll be another train, won't there? So listen to me. You owe it to yourself." No one had been present, he told me. Raphael had taken Katja down to the kitchen. My mother had gone to ring the emergency number. Gran had gone to Granddad to settle him down. Sarah-Jane had taken me to my room. And James the Lodger had disappeared back upstairs. "I could have taken her from the bath just then," he said. "I could have given her the kiss of life. I could have used CPR on her. But I held her there, Gideon. I held her down beneath the water until I heard your mother finish her call to emergency." "That wouldn't have done it. There wouldn't have been enough time." "There was. Your mother stayed on the phone with emergency till we heard the paramedics pounding on the front door. She relayed emergency's instructions to me. I pretended to do what they directed. But she couldn't see me, Gideon, so she didn't know that I hadn't taken Sonia out of the bath." "I don't believe you. You've lied to me my whole life. You said nothing. You told me nothing." "I'm telling you now." Below me, the train passed. I saw the engineer look up at the last moment. Our eyes met, his widened, and he reached for his radio transmitter. The warning was sent to trains that would follow. My opportunity for oblivion was past. Dad said, "You must believe me. I'm telling you the truth." "What about Katja, then?" "What about Katja?" "She went to prison. And we sent her there, didn't we? We lied to the police and she went to prison. For twenty years, Dad. We're to blame for that." "No. Gideon, she agreed to go." What?" "Come back to me. Here. I'll explain." So I gave him that much: the belief that he'd talked me away from the tracks when in fact I knew that we were moments away from being joined by the transport police. I climbed back onto the footbridge proper, and I approached my father. When I was close enough to him, he grabbed me as if dragging me from the brink of a chasm. He held me to him, and I could feel the hammering of his heart. I didn't believe anything that he'd told me so far, but I was willing to listen, to hear him out, and to try to see past the facade he wore and to ascertain what facts lay beneath it. He spoke in a rush, never once releasing me as he told me the story. Believing that I and not my father had drowned my sister, Katja Wolff had known instantly that she bore a large part of the responsibility because she had left Sonia alone. If she agreed to take the blame claiming to have left the child for a minute only while she took a phone call then Dad would see that she was rewarded. He would pay her twenty thousand pounds for this service to his family. And in the event that she should come to trial for negligence, he would add to that amount another twenty thousand for every year she was inconvenienced thereafter. "We didn't know the police would build a case against her," he said into my ear. "We didn't know about the healed fractures on your sister's body. We didn't know the tabloids would seize the case with such ferocity. And we didn't know that Bertram Cresswell-White would prosecute her like a man with a chance to convict Myra Hindley all over again. In the normal course of events, she might have been given a suspended sentence for negligence. Or at the most five years. But everything went wrong. And when the judge recommended twenty years because of the abuse .. . It was too late." I pulled away from him. Truth or lie? I wondered as I studied his face. "Who abused Sonia?" "No one," he said. "But the fractures ' "She was frail, Gideon. Her skeleton was delicate. It was part of her condition. Katja's defence counsel put this to the jury, but Cresswell-White tore their experts to pieces. Everything went badly. Everything went wrong." "Then why didn't she give evidence in her own defence? Why didn't she talk to the police? Her own lawyers?" "That was part of the deal." "The deal' "Twenty thousand pounds if she remained silent." "But you must have known What? I thought. What must he have known? That her friend Katie Waddington wouldn't lie under oath, wouldn't testify to having made a phone call that she hadn't made? That Sarah-Jane Beckett would paint her in the worst possible light? That the Crown Prosecutor would try her as a child abuser and limn her as the devil incarnate? That the judge would recommend a draconian sentence? What exactly was my father to have known? I released myself from the hold he had on me. I began to retrace my route from Chalcot Square. He followed closely on my heels, not speaking. But I could feel his eyes on me. I could feel the burn of their penetration. He's made all of this up, I concluded. He has too many answers and they're coming too quickly. I told him on the front steps to my house. I said, "I don't believe you, Dad." He countered with, "Why else would she have remained silent? It was hardly in her interests to do so." "Oh, I believe that part," I told him. "I believe the part about the twenty thousand pounds. You would have paid her that much to keep me from harm. And to keep it from Granddad that your freak of a son had deliberately drowned your freak of a daughter." "That's not what happened!" "We both know it is." I turned to go inside. He grabbed my arm. "Will you believe your mother?" he asked me. I turned. He must have seen the question, the disbelief, and the wariness on my face because he went on without my speaking. "She's been phoning me. Since Wigmore Hall, she's been phoning at least twice a week. She read about what happened, she phoned to ask about you, and she's been phoning ever since. I'll arrange a meeting between you, if you like." "What good would that do? You said she didn't see ' "Gideon, for God's sake. Why do you think she left me? Why do you suppose she took every picture of your sister with her?" I stared at him. I tried to read him. And more than that, I tried to find the answer to a single question that I didn't give voice to: Even if I saw her, would she tell me the truth? But Dad appeared to see this question in my eyes because quickly he said, "Your mother has no reason to lie to you, son. And surely the manner of her disappearance from, our lives tells you she couldn't bear the guilt of living the pretence that I'd forced her into living." "It also might mean that she couldn't bear to live in the same house with a son who'd murdered his sister." "Then let her tell you that." We were eye to eye, and I waited for a sign that he was the least apprehensive. But no sign came. "You can trust me," he responded. And I wanted more than anything to believe that promise. Chapter Twenty-Five Havers said, "I wish the situation would stop changing direction every twenty-five minutes. If it would, we might actually be able to get a handle on this case." Lynley made a turn into Belsize Avenue and did a quick recce of the A to Zing his brain to plan a route to Portman Street that wouldn't put them in the middle of a traffic jam. Next to him, Havers was continuing to grouse. "So if Davies is down, who're we on to? Leach must be right. It's got to be back to Wolff with another vintage car in possession of someone she knows that we haven't sussed out yet. That someone loans the car to her -probably not knowing what she wants it for and she goes gunning for the principals who put her into the nick. Or maybe the two of them go gunning together. We haven't considered that possibility yet." "That scenario argues an innocent woman going to prison for twenty years," Lynley pointed out. "It's been known to happen," Havers said. "But not with the innocent person saying nothing about being innocent in the first place." "She's from East Germany, former totalitarian state. She'd been in England .. . what? Two years? Three? When Sonia Davies drowned? She finds herself questioned by the local rozzers and she gets paranoid and won't talk to them. That makes sense to me. I don't expect she had the warm fuzzies for the police where she came from, do you?" Lynley said, "I agree that she might have been rattled by police. But she would have told someone she was innocent, Havers. She would have spoken to her lawyers, surely. But she didn't. What does that suggest to you?" "Someone got to her." "How?" "Hell, I don't know." Havers pulled at her hair in frustration, as if this action would dislodge another possibility in her brain, which it did not. Lynley thought about what Havers had suggested, however. He said, "Page Winston. He may have something for us." Havers used Lynley's mobile to do so. They worked their way down to Finchley Road. The wind, which had been brisk all day, had picked up in force during the late afternoon and now it was hurtling autumn leaves and rubbish along the street. It was also carrying a storm in from the northeast, and as they made a turn from Park Road into Baker Street, drops began to splatter the Bentley's windscreen. November's early darkness had fallen on London, and the lights from passing vehicles coned forward, creating a playing area for the first sheet of rain. Lynley cursed. "This'll make a fine mess of the crime scene." Havers agreed. Lynley's mobile rang. Havers handed it over. Winston Nkata reported that unless Katja Wolff s long time lover was lying, the German woman was in the clear. Both for the murder of Eugenie Davies and for the hit and run of Malcolm Webberly. They were together both nights, he said. Lynley said, "That's nothing new, Winston. You've told us that Yasmin Edwards confirms that she and Katja ' This lover wasn't Yasmin Edwards, Nkata informed him. This lover was the deputy warden at Holloway, one Noreen McKay who'd been involved with Katja Wolff for years. McKay hadn't wanted to come forward for obvious reasons, but put on the rack, she'd admitted to being with the German woman on both nights in question. "Phone her name into the incident room anyway," Lynley told Nkata. "Have them run her through the DVLA. Where's Wolff now?" "Xpect she's home in Kennington," Nkata said. "I'm heading over there now." "Why?" There was a pause on Nkata's end before the constable said, "Thought it best to let her know she's in the clear. I was rough on her." Lynley wondered exactly whom the constable meant when he said her. "First phone Leach with the McKay woman's name. Her address as well." "After that?" "See to the Kennington situation. But, Winnie, go easy." "Why's that, "Spector?" "We've another hit and run." Lynley brought him into the picture, telling him that he and Havers were heading to Portman Street. "With Davies down, we've got a new match. New rules, new players, and for all we know, an entirely new objective." "But with the Wolff woman having an alibi ' "Just go easy," Lynley cautioned. "There's more to know." When Lynley rang off, he brought Havers into the picture. She said at his conclusion, "The pickings are getting slim, Inspector." "Aren't they just," Lynley replied. Another ten minutes and they had made the circuit to come into Portman Street where, had they not known an accident had happened, they would have concluded as much from the flashing lights a short distance from the square and the car park quality of the stationary traffic. They pulled to the kerb, half in a bus lane and half on the pavement. They trudged through the rain in the direction of the flashing lights, shouldering their way through a crowd of onlookers. The lights came from two panda cars that were blocking the bus lane and a third that was impeding the flow of traffic. The constables from one of the cars were in conversation with a traffic warden in the middle of the street, while those from the other two cars were divided between talking to people on the pavement and wedging themselves into the upper and lower parts of a bus that was itself parked at an angle with one tyre on the kerb. There was no ambulance anywhere in sight. Nor was there any sign of a scene-of-crime team. And the actual point of impact -which certainly had to be where the panda was parked in the traffic lane had yet to be cordoned off. Which meant that what valuable evidence might be there wasn't being safeguarded and would soon be lost. Lynley muttered a curse. With Havers on his heels, he squeezed through the crowd and showed his identification to the nearest policeman, a bobby in an anorak. Water dripped from his helmet onto his neck. Periodically, he slapped it away. "What's happened?" Lynley asked the constable. "Where's the victim?" "Off to hospital," the constable said. "He's alive, then?" Lynley glanced at Havers. She gave him a thumbs up. "What's his condition?" "Damn lucky, I'd say. Last time we had something like this, we were scraping the corpse off the pavement for a week, and the driver wasn't fit to go another hundred yards." "You've witnesses? We'll need to speak with them." "Oh, aye? How's that?" "We've a similar hit and run in West Hampstead," Lynley told him. "Another in Hammersmith. And a third in Maida Vale. This one today involves a man who's related to one of our earlier victims." "Your facts are off," the constable said. "What?" Havers was the one to ask. "This isn't a hit and run." The constable nodded at the bus, where inside one of his colleagues was taking a statement from a woman in the seat directly behind the driver's. The driver himself was out on the pavement, gesticulating to his left front headlamp and speaking earnestly to another policeman. "Bus hit someone," the constable clarified. "Pedestrian was shoved out from the pavement directly into its path. Lucky he wasn't killed. Mr. Nai Here he gave a nod to the driver of the bus, 'has good reflexes and the bus had its brakes serviced last week. We've got some bumps and bruises from the sudden stop this is on the passengers inside and the victim's got a bone or two broken, but that's the extent of it." "Did anyone see who pushed him?" Lynley asked. "That's what we're trying to find out, mate." Jill left the Humber in a spot marked clearly for ambulances only, but she didn't care. Let them tow, clamp, or fine her. She squirmed out from beneath the steering wheel and walked rapidly to the entrance for accidents and emergencies. There was no receptionist to greet her, just a guard behind a plain wooden desk. He took a look at Jill and said, "Shall I ring your doctor, Madam, or is he meeting you here?" Jill said, "What?" before she understood the inference that the guard was drawing from her condition, her personal appearance and her frantic state. She said, "No. No doctor," to which the man said, "You have no doctor?" in a disapproving tone. Ignoring him, Jill made a lumbering dash in the direction of someone who looked like a doctor. He was consulting a clipboard and wore a stethoscope round his neck, which gave him an air of authority that the guard did not possess. Jill cried, "Richard Davies?" and the doctor looked up. "Where is Richard Davies? I was phoned. I was told to come. He's been brought in and don't tell me.. . you mustn't tell me he's.. . Please. Where is he?" "Jill .. ." She swung round. He was leaning against a jamb whose door opened into what appeared to be some sort of treatment room just behind the guard's desk. Beyond him, she could see trolleys with people lying upon them, covered to their chins in thin pastel blankets, and beyond the trolleys she could see cubicles formed by curtains at the bottom of which the feet of those ministering to the injured, the critically ill, or the dying were only just visible. Richard was from among the merely injured. Jill felt her knees grow weak at the sight of him. She cried, "Oh God, I thought you were .. . They said .. . When they phoned.. ." and she began to weep, which was utterly unlike her and told her just how terrified she'd been. He moved to her and they held each other. He said, "I asked them not to phone you. I told them I'd ring you myself so that you'd know, but they insisted .. . It's their procedure ... If I'd known how upset .. . Here, Jill, don't cry .. ." He tried to fish out a handkerchief for her, which was how she first noticed that his right arm was in plaster. And then she noticed the rest of it: the walking cast on his right foot which she could now see beyond the ripped-open seam of his navy trousers, the ugly bruising on one side of his face and the row of stitches beneath his right eye. "What happened!" she cried. He said, "Get me home, darling. They want me to spend the night.. . but I don't need ... I can't think .. ." He gazed at her earnestly. "Jill, will you take me home?" She said of course. Had he ever doubted that she'd be there, do what he asked of her, tend to him, nurse him? He thanked her with a gratitude that she found touching. And when they gathered his things together, she was even more touched to see that he'd managed the shopping he'd gone out to do. He brought five mangled and soiled shopping bags out of the treatment room with him. "At least I found the intercom," he said wryly. They made their way to the car, ignoring the protest of the young doctor and even younger nurse who tried to stop them. Their progress was slow, Richard needing to stop to rest every four paces or so. As they went out of the ambulance entrance, he told her briefly what had happened. He'd gone into more than one shop, he said, looking for what he had in mind. He ended up making more purchases than he'd expected, and the shopping bags were unwieldy in the crowds out on the pavement. "I wasn't paying attention, and I should have been," he told her. "There were so many people." He was making his way along Portman Street to where he'd left his Granada in the underground car park in Portman Square. The pavement was packed: shoppers running for one last purchase in Oxford Street before the shops closed, business people heading for home, streams of students jostling one another, the homeless eager to find doorways for the night and a handout of coins to keep them from hunger. "You know how it can be in that part of town," he said. "It was madness to go there, but I just didn't want to put it off any longer." The shove, he said, came out of nowhere just as a Number 74 bus was pulling out from its stop. Before he knew what was happening, he was hurtling straight into the vehicle's path. One tyre drove over "Your arm," Jill said. "Your arm. Oh Richard ' "The police said how lucky I was," Richard finished. "It could have been .. . You know what might have happened." He'd paused again in their walk to the car. Jill said angrily, "People don't take care any longer. They're in such a hurry all the time. They walk down the street with their mobiles fixed to their skulls and they don't even see anyone else." She touched his bruised cheek. "Let me get you home, darling. Let me baby you a bit." She smiled at him fondly. "I'll make you some soup and soldiers, and I'll pop you into bed." "I'll need to be at my own place tonight," he said. "Forgive me, Jill, but I couldn't face sleeping on your sofa." "Of course you couldn't," she said. "Let's get you home." She repositioned the five shopping bags that she had taken from him in Casualty. They were heavy and awkward, she thought. It was no wonder he'd been distracted by them. She said, "What did the police do with the person who pushed you?" "They don't know who it was." "Don't know .. . ? How is that possible, Richard?" He shrugged. She knew him well enough to understand at once that he wasn't telling her everything. She said, "Richard?" "Whoever it was, he didn't come forward once I was hit. For all I know, he or she didn't even know I fell into the traffic. It happened so fast, and just as the bus was pulling away from the kerb. If they were in a rush.. ." He adjusted his jacket over his shoulder where it hung cape-like because he could not fit it over the cast on his arm. "I just want to forget it happened." Jill said, "Surely someone would have seen something." "They were interviewing people when the ambulance fetched me." He spied the Humber where Jill had left it and lurched towards it in silence. Jill followed him, saying, "Richard, are you telling me everything?" He didn't reply until they were at the car. Then he said, "They think it was deliberate, Jill," and then, "Where's Gideon? He needs to be warned." Jill hardly knew what she was doing as she opened the car door, flipped the seat forward, and deposited Richard's packages in the back. Jill saw her lover safely into his seat and then joined him behind the wheel of the car. She said, "What do you mean, deliberate?" and she looked straight ahead at the worm tracks that the rain was making on her windscreen and she tried to hide her fear. He made no reply. She turned to him. She said, "Richard, what do you mean by deliberate? Is this connected to and then she saw that he was holding in his lap the frame she'd found beneath her seat. He said, "Where did you get this?" She told him and added, "But I can't understand .. . Where did it come from? Who is she? I don't know her. I don't recognise .. . And surely she can't be .. ." Jill hesitated, not wanting to say it. Richard did so for her. "This is Sonia. My daughter." And Jill felt a ring of ice take a sudden position round her heart. In the half light coming from the hospital entrance, she reached for the picture and tilted it towards her. In it, a child blonde as her brother had been in childhood held a stuffed panda up to her cheek. She laughed at the camera as if she hadn't a care in the world. Which she probably hadn't known that she did have, Jill thought as she looked at the picture again. She said, "Richard, you never mentioned that Sonia .. . Why has no one ever told me .. . ? Richard. Why didn't you tell me your daughter was Down's Syndrome?" He looked at her then. "I don't talk about Sonia," he said evenly. "I never talk about Sonia. You know that." "But I needed to know. I ought to have known. I deserved to know." "You sound like Gideon." "What's Gideon to do with .. . ? Richard, why haven't you spoken to me about her before? And what's this picture doing in my car?" The stresses of the evening the conversation with her mother, the phone call from the hospital, the frantic drive all of it descended upon Jill at once. "Are you trying to frighten me?" she cried. "Are you hoping that if I see what happened to Sonia, I'll agree to have Catherine in hospital and not at my mother's? Is that what you're doing? Is that what this is all about?" Richard tossed the picture into the back seat where it landed on one of the packages. He said, "Don't be absurd. Gideon wants a picture of her -God only knows why and I dug that one out to have it refrained. It needs to be, as you probably saw. The frame's banged up and the glass.. . You've seen for yourself. That's it, Jill. Nothing more than that." "But why didn't you tell me? Don't you see the risk that we were running? If she was Down's Syndrome because of something genetic .. . We could have gone to a doctor. We could have had blood tests or something. Something. Whatever they do. But instead you let me become pregnant and I never knew that there was a chance .. ." "I knew," he said. "There was no chance. I knew you'd have the amnio test. And once we were told Cara's fine, what would've been the point of upsetting you?" "But when we decided to try for a baby, I had the right.. . Because if the tests had shown that something was wrong, I would have had to decide .. . Don't you see that I needed to know from the start? I needed to know the risk so that I'd have time to think it through, in case I had to decide .. . Richard, I can't believe you kept this from me." He said, "Start the car, Jill. I want to go home." "You can't think I can dismiss this so easily." He sighed, raised his head towards the roof and took a deep breath. He said, "Jill, I've been hit by a bus. The police think someone pushed me deliberately. That means someone intended me dead. Now, I understand that you're upset. You argue that you've a right to be and I'll accept that for now. But if you'd look beyond your own concerns for one moment, you'll see that I need to get home. My face hurts, my ankle's throbbing, and my arm is swelling. We can thrash this out in the car and I can end up back in casualty asking to see a doctor or we can go home and revisit this situation in the morning. Have it either way." Jill stared at him till he turned his head and met her gaze. She said, "Not telling me about her is tantamount to lying." She started the car before he could reply, putting it into gear with a jerk. He winced, "Had I known you'd react this way, I would have told you. Do you think I actually want anything to come between us? Now? With the baby due any moment? Do you think I want that? For the love of God, we nearly lost each other tonight." Jill moved the car out into Grafton Way. She knew intuitively that something wasn't right, but what she couldn't intuit was whether that something was wrong within her or wrong within the man she loved. Richard didn't speak till they'd crisscrossed over into Portland Place and headed through the rain in the direction of Cavendish Square. And then he said, "I must speak to Gideon as soon as possible. He could be in danger as well. If something happens to him .. . after everything else .. ." The as well told Jill volumes. She said, "This is connected to what happened to Eugenie, isn't it?" His silence comprised an eloquent response. Fear began to eat away at her again. Too late Jill saw that the route she'd chosen was going to take them straight past Wigmore Hall. And the worst of it was that there was apparently a concert on tonight, because a glut of taxis were crowding the street there, all of them jockeying to disgorge their passengers directly under the glass canopy. She saw Richard turn from the sight of it. He said, "She's out of prison. And twelve weeks to the day that she got out of prison, Eugenie was murdered." "You think that German woman .. . ? The woman who killed .. . ?" And then it was all back before her again, rendering any other discussion impossible: the image of that pitiable baby and the fact that her condition had been hidden, hidden from Jill Foster who'd had a serious and vested interest in knowing all there was to know about Richard Davies and his fathering of children. She said, "Were you afraid to tell me? Is that it?" "You knew Katja Wolff was out of prison. We even spoke of that with the detective the other day." "I'm not talking about Katja Wolff. I'm talking about .. . You know what I'm talking about." She swung the car into Portman Square and from there dropped down and over to Park Lane, saying, "You were afraid that I wouldn't want to try for a baby if I knew. I'd have too many fears. You were afraid of that, so you didn't tell me because you didn't trust me." "How did you expect me to give you the information?" Richard asked. "Was I supposed to say, "Oh by the way, my ex-wife gave birth to a handicapped child?" It wasn't relevant." "How can you say that?" "Because we weren't trying for a baby, you and I. We were having sex. Good sex. The best. And we were in love. But we weren't ' "I wasn't taking precautions. You knew that." "But what I didn't know was that you weren't aware that Sonia had been .. . My God, it was in all the papers when she died: the fact that she was drowned, that she was Down's Syndrome and that she was drowned. I never thought I had to mention it." "I didn't know. She died over twenty years ago, Richard. I was sixteen years old. What sixteen-year-old do you know who reads the newspaper and remembers what she's read two decades later?" "I'm not responsible for what you can and can't remember." "But you are responsible for making me aware of something that could affect my future and our baby's future." "You were going at it without precautions. I assumed you had your future planned out." "Are you telling me you think I entrapped you?" They'd reached the traffic lights at the end of Park Lane, and Jill pivoted awkwardly in her seat to face him. "Is that what you're saying? Are you telling me that I was so desperate to have you as a husband that I got myself pregnant to ensure you'd be willing to trot up to the altar? Well, it hasn't exactly worked out that way, has it? I've compromised right, left, and centre for you." A taxi blared its horn behind her. Jill glanced in the rear view mirror first, then took note that the lights were now green. They edged their way round the Wellington Arch, and Jill was grateful for the size of the Humber that made her more than visible to the buses and more intimidating to the smaller cars. "What I'm telling you," Richard said steadily, 'is that I don't want to argue about this. It happened. I didn't tell you something I thought you knew. I may not have mentioned it, but I never tried to hide it." "How can you say that when you haven't a single photo of her anywhere?" "That's been for Gideon's sake. Do you think I'd want him to spend his life looking at his murdered sister? How do you expect that would affect his music? When Sonia was killed, we all went through hell. All of us, Jill, including Gideon. We needed to forget, and removing all the pictures of her seemed one way to do it. Now if you can't understand that or forgive it, if you wish to end our relationship because of it His voice quavered. He put his hand to his face, pulling on the skin along his jaw, savagely pulling it, saying nothing. And neither did Jill for the remainder of the journey to Cornwall Gardens. She took the route along Kensington Gore. Seven minutes more and they were parking at a spot midway along the leaf-blown square. In silence, Jill helped her lover from the car and reached into the back seat to collect the parcels. On the one hand, since they were for Catherine, it made more sense to leave them where they were. On the other hand, since everything was suddenly so unsettled about the future of Catherine's parents, it seemed to send a subtle but unmistakable message to take them inside to Richard's flat. Jill scooped them up. She also scooped up the photo that had been the cause of their argument. Richard said, "Here. Let me take something," and offered his good hand. She said, "I can manage." "Jill .. ." "I can manage." She walked to Braemar Mansions, the decrepit building yet another reminder of how she was compromising with her fiance. Who would want to live in such a place? she wondered. Who would be willing to purchase a flat in a building that was falling apart at the seams? If she and Richard waited to sell his flat before they tried to sell her own, they'd be forever denied their house, their garden, and their place to be a family with Catherine. Which was, perhaps, what he had wanted all along. He never remarried, she told herself. Twenty years since his divorce -sixteen? eighteen? oh, it didn't even matter and he'd never taken another woman into his life. And now, on this day, on this night during which he himself could have died, he thought of her. Of what had happened to her and why and what he must now do to safeguard .. . whom? Not Jill Foster, not his pregnant companion, not their unborn child, but his son. Gideon. His son. His bloody son. Richard came up behind her, as she mounted the steps to the building. He reached round her and unlocked the door, pushing it open so that she could enter the unlit hall with its cracking tiles on the floor and its wallpaper sagging from its mildewed walls. It seemed a further affront that there was no lift and only a partial curve in the staircase to serve as a landing should someone wish to rest while ascending. But Jill didn't want to rest. She climbed to the first floor and let her lover struggle up behind her. He was breathing heavily when he reached the top. She would have felt repentant to have left him fumbling upwards with only the rickety railing to assist in a climb made awkward by the plaster on his leg but she thought the lesson was a good one for him. "My building has a lift," she said. "People want lifts, you know, when they're looking for flats. And how much do you actually expect to get for this place, compared with what we could get for mine? We could move house, then. We could have a house. And then you'd have the time to paint, redecorate, whatever it might take to make this place saleable." "I'm exhausted," he said. "I can't continue like this." He shouldered past her and limped to the door of his flat. She said, "That's convenient, isn't it?" as they went inside and Richard closed the door behind them. The lights were on. Richard frowned at this. He walked to the window and peered out. "You never continue what you want to avoid." "That's not true. You're becoming unreasonable. You've had a fright, we've both had a fright, and you're reacting to that. When you've had a chance to rest ' "Don't tell me what to do!" Her voice rose shrilly. She knew at heart that Richard was right, that she was being unreasonable, but she couldn't stop. Somehow all the unspoken doubts she'd been harbouring for months were mingling with her unacknowledged fears. Everything was bubbling up inside her, like noxious gases looking for a fissure through which they could seep. "You've had your way. I've given it and given it. And now you're going to give me mine." He didn't move from the window. "Has all of this come from seeing that ancient picture?" he asked and extended his hand to her. "Give it to me, then. I want to destroy it." "I thought you meant it for Gideon," she cried. "I did, but if it's going to cause this kind of trouble between us ... Give it to me, Jill." "No. I'll give it to Gideon. Gideon's what's important, after all. How Gideon feels, what he does, when he plays his music. He's stood between us from the very first my God, we even met because of Gideon and I don't intend to displace him now. You want Gideon to have this picture, and he shall have it. Let's phone him at once and tell him we've got it." "Jill. Don't be a fool. I haven't told him you know he's afraid to play, and if you phone him about the picture, he's going to feel betrayed." "You can't have it all ways, my darling. He wants the picture and he shall have it tonight. I'll take it over to him myself." She picked up the phone and began to punch the number. "Jill!" Richard said and started to approach her. "What're you going to take over to me, Jill?" Gideon asked. They whirled round at the sound of his voice. He was standing in the doorway to the sitting room, in the dim passage that led to the bedroom and to Richard's study. He held a square envelope in one hand and a floral card in the other. His face was the colour of sand, and his eyes were ringed by the circles of insomnia. "What were you going to take over to me?" he repeated. Gideon 12 NOVEMBER You sit in your father's leather arm chair, Dr. Rose, watching me as I stumble through the recitation of the dreadful facts. Your face remains as it always is interested in what I'm saying but without judgement -and your eyes shine with a compassion that makes me feel like a child in desperate need of comfort. And that is what I have become: phoning you and weeping, begging that you see me at once, claiming that there is no one else whom I can trust. You say, Meet me at the office in ninety minutes. Precise, like that. Ninety minutes. I want to know what you are doing that you cannot meet me there this minute. You say, Calm yourself, Gideon. Go within. Breathe deeply. I need to see you now, I cry. You tell me that you're with your father, but you will be there as soon as you can. You say, Wait on the steps if you get there ahead of me. Ninety minutes, Gideon. Can you remember that? So now we are here and now I tell you everything that I have remembered on this terrible day. I end it all by saying, How is it possible that I forgot all this? What sort of monster am I that I wasn't able to remember anything of what happened all those years ago? It's clear to you that I have finished my recitation, and that is when you explain things to me. You say in your calm and dispassionate voice that the memory of harming my sister and believing myself to have killed her was something that was not only horrific but associatively connected to the music playing when I committed the act. The act was the memory I repressed, but because music was connected to it, I ultimately repressed the music as well. Remember, you say, that a repressed memory is like a magnet, Gideon. It attracts to it other things that are associated with the memory and pulls them in, repressing them also. The Archduke was intimately related to your actions that night. You repressed those actions and it appears that everyone either overtly or subtly encouraged you to repress them -and the music got drawn into the repression. But I've always been able to play everything else. Only The Archduke defeated me. Indeed, you say. But when Katja Wolff appeared unexpectedly at Wigmore Hall and introduced herself to you, the complete repression was finally triggered. Why? Why? Because Katja Wolff, your violin, The Archduke, and your sister's death were all associatively connected in your mind. That's how it works, Gideon. The main repressed memory was your belief that you had drowned your sister. That repression drew to it the memory of Katja, the person most associated with your sister. What followed Katja into the black hole was The Archduke, the piece that was playing that night. Finally, the rest of the music symbolised by the violin itself followed that single piece you'd always had trouble playing. That's how it works. I am silent at this. I am afraid to ask the next question Will I be able to play again? because I despise what it reveals about me. We are all the centres of our individual worlds, but most of us are capable of seeing others who exist within our singular boundaries. But I have never been capable of that. I have seen only myself from the very first time I became conscious that I had a self to see. To ask about my music now seems monstrous to me. That question would act as a repudiation of my innocent sister's entire existence. And I've done enough repudiating of Sonia to last me the rest of my life. Do you believe your father? you ask me. What he said about Sonia's death and the part he himself played in her death .. . Do you believe him, Gideon? I'll believe nothing till I talk to my mother. 13 NOVEMBER I begin to see my life in a perspective that makes much clear to me, Dr. Rose. I begin to see how the relationships I've attempted to form or have formed successfully were actually ruled by that which I didn't want to face: my sister's death. The people who didn't know how I was involved in the circumstances of her death were the people I was able to be with, and those were the people most concerned with my own prime concern, which was my professional life: Sherrill and my other fellow musicians, recording artists, conductors, producers, concert organisers round the globe. But the people who might have wanted more from me than a performance on my instrument .. . those were the people with whom I failed. Beth is the best example of this. Of course I couldn't be the partner in life that she wanted me to be. Partnership of that sort suggested to me alevel of intimacy, trust, and revelation in which I could not afford to participate. My only hope for survival was to effect an escape from her. And so it is with Libby now. That prime symbol of intimacy between us the Act, if you will is beyond my power. We lie in each other's arms, and feeling desire is so far removed from what I'm experiencing that Libby may as well be a sack of potatoes. At least I know why. And until I speak to my mother and learn the full truth of what happened that night, I can have nothing with any woman, no matter who she is, no matter how little she expects of me. 16 NOVEMBER I was returning from Primose Hill when I saw Libby again. I'd taken one of the kites out, a new one that I'd worked on for several weeks and was eager to try. I'd employed what I thought was an intriguingly aerodynamic design, crafted to ensure that the height reached would be a record-breaking one. On the top of Primrose Hill, there is nothing to impede the flight of a kite. The trees are distant, and the only structures that could get in the way of anything airborne are the buildings that stand far beyond the hill's crest, on the other side of the roads that border the park. As it was a day of good wind, I assumed that I'd have the kite aloft within moments of releasing it. That wasn't the case. Every time I released it, began to jog forward, and played out the twine, the kite shuddered, tossed and turned on the wind, and plummeted to the ground like a missile. Time and again, I made the attempt, after adjusting the leading edge, the stand offs, even the bridle. Nothing helped. Eventually, one of the bottom spreaders fractured, and I had to give up the whole enterprise. I was trudging along Chalcot Crescent when I encountered Libby. She was heading in the direction I had just come from, a Boots bag dangling from one hand and a can of diet Coke in the other. Picnic lunch, I assumed. I could see the top of a baguette rising out of the bag like a crusty appendage. "The wind'll be a nuisance if you're planning to eat your lunch out there," I said with a nod in the direction I'd just walked. "Hi to you, too," was her reply. She said it politely, but her smile was brief. We hadn't seen each other since our unhappy encounter in her flat, and although I'd heard her come in and go out and had admittedly anticipated her ringing my bell, she hadn't done so. I'd missed her, but once I'd remembered what I needed to remember about Sonia, about Katja, and about my part in the death of one and the imprisonment of the other, I realised it was just as well. I wasn't fit to be any woman's companion, be that her friend, her lover, or her husband. So whether she realised it or not, Libby was wise to steer clear. "I've been trying to get this one up," I said lifting the broken kite by way of explaining my statement about the wind. "If you stay off the hill and eat down below, you might be all right." "Ducks," she said. For a moment I thought the word was another strange, California term I'd never heard before. She went on. "I'm going to feed them. In Regent's Park." "Ah. I see. I thought.. . Well, seeing the bread ' "And associating me with food. Yeah. It makes good sense." "I don't associate you with food, Libby." "Okay," she said. "You don't." I shifted the kite from my left hand to my right. I didn't like the feeling of being at odds with her, but I had no clear idea how to bridge the chasm between us. We are, at heart, such different people, I thought. Perhaps, just as Dad had seen it from the first, it was always a ridiculous affiliation: Libby Neale and Gideon Davies. What had they in common after all? "I haven't seen Rafe in a couple of days," Libby said, indicating the direction ofChalcot Square with a toss of her head. "I was wondering if something happened to him." The fact that she'd given me an opening prompted me to realise that she always had been the person to provide the openings in our conversations. And that realisation was what prompted me to say, "Something has happened. But not to him." She looked at me earnestly. "Your dad's okay, right?" "He's fine." "His girlfriend?" "Jill's fine. Everyone's fine." "Oh. Good." I took a deep breath. "Libby, I'm going to see my mother. After all this time, I'm actually going to see her. Dad told me she's been phoning him about me, so we're going to meet. Just the two of us. And when we do, there's a chance that I'll get to the bottom of the violin problem." She put her can of diet Coke into the Boots bag and rubbed her hand down her hip. "I guess that's cool, Gid. If you want it to be. It's, like, what you want in life, right?" "It is my life." "Sure. It's your life. That's what you've made it." I could tell by her tone that we were back to the uneven ground we'd walked over before, and I felt a surge of frustration run through me. "Libby I'm a musician. If nothing else, it's how I support myself. It's where the money to live comes from. You can understand that." "I understand," she said. "Then ' "Look, Gid. Like I said, I'm heading out to feed the ducks." "Why don't you come up afterwards? We could have a meal." "I've got plans for tapping." "Tapping?" She looked away. For a moment her face expressed a reaction I couldn't quite grasp. Whe she turned her head back to me, her eyes appeared sorrowful. But when she spoke, her voice was resigned. "Tap dancing," she said. "It's what I like to do." "Sorry. I'd forgotten." "Yeah," she said. "I know." "What about later, then? I should be home. I'm just hanging about waiting to hear from Dad. Come up after your dancing. If you've a mind to, that is." "Sure," she said. "I'll see you around." At that, I knew she wouldn't come up. The fact that I'd forgotten her dancing was, apparently, the last straw for her. I said, "Libby, I've had a lot on my mind. You know that. You must see ' "Jesus," she interrupted me. "You don't get anything." "I "get" that you're angry." "I'm not angry. I'm not anything. I'm going to the park to feed the ducks. Because I've got the time and I like ducks. I've always liked ducks. And after that, I'm going to a tap dancing lesson. Because I like tap dancing." "You're avoiding me, aren't you?" "This isn't about you. I'm not about you. The rest of the world isn't about you. If you, like, stop playing the violin tomorrow, the rest of the world will just go on being the rest of the world. But how can you go on being you if there's no you in the first place, Gid?" "That's what I'm trying to recapture." "You can't recapture what's never been there. You can create it if you want to. But you can't just go out with a net and bag it." "Why won't you see ' "I want to feed the ducks," she cut in. And with that, she swung past me and headed down to Regent's Park Road. I watched her go, I wanted to run after her and argue my point. How easy it was for her to talk about one's simply being oneself when she didn't have a past that was littered with accomplishments, all of which served as guideposts to a future that had long been determined. It was easy for her simply to exist in a given moment of a given day because moments were all she had ever had. But my life had never been like that, and I wanted her to acknowledge that fact. She must have read my mind. She turned when she came to the corner and shouted something back at me. "What?" I called to her, as her words were taken by the wind. She cupped hands round her mouth and tried again. "Good luck with your mother," she shouted. 17 NOVEMBER I'd been able to put my mother from my mind for years because of my work. Preparing for this concert or that recording session, practising my instrument with Raphael, filming a documentary, rehearsing with this or that orchestra, touring Europe or the US, meeting my agent, negotiating contracts, working with the East London Conservatory .. . My days and my hours had been filled with music for two decades. There had been no place in them for speculation about the parent who'd deserted me. But now there was time, and she dominated my thoughts. And I knew even as I thought about it, even as I wondered, imagined, and pondered, that keeping my mind fixed on my mother was a way to keep it at a distance from Sonia. I wasn't altogether successful. For my sister still came to me in unguarded moments. "She doesn't look right, Mummy," I remember saying, hovering over the bed on which my sister lay, swaddled in blankets, wearing a cap, in possession of a face that didn't look as it should. "Don't say that, Gideon," Mother replied. "Don't ever say that about your sister." "But her eyes are squishy. She's got a funny mouth." I said "don't talk like that about your sister!" We began in that way, making the subject of Sonia's disabilities verboten among us. When they began to dominate our lives, we made no mention of them. Sonia was fretful, Sonia cried through the night, Sonia went into hospital for two or three weeks. But still we pretended that life was normal, that this was the way things always happened in families when a baby was born. We went about life in that way till Granddad fractured the glass wall of our denial. "What good are either of them?" he raged. "What good is any one of you, Dick?" Is that when it began in my head? Is that when I first saw the necessity to prove myself different from my sister? Granddad had lumped me together with Sonia, but I would show him the truth. Yet how could I do that when everything revolved round her? Her health, her growth, her disabilities, her development. A cry in the night and the household was rallied to see to her needs. A change in her temperature and life was halted till a doctor could explain what had brought it about. An alteration in the manner of her feeding and specialists were consulted for an explanation. She was the topic of every conversation but at the same time the cause of her ailments could never be directly mentioned. And I remembered this, Dr. Rose. I remembered because when I thought of my mother, my sister was clinging to the shirttails of any memory I was able to evoke. She was there in my mind as persistently as she'd been there in my life. And as I waited for the time when I would see my mother, I sought to shake her from me with as much determination as I'd sought to shake her from me when she was alive. Yes, I do see what that means. She is in my way now. She was in my way then. Because of her, life was altered. Because of her, it was going to alter still more. "You'll be going to school, Gideon." That must be when the seed was planted: the seed of disappointment, anger, and thwarted dreams that grew into a forest of blame. Dad was the one who broke the news to me. He comes into my bedroom. I'm sitting at the table by the window, where Sarah-Jane Beckett and I do our lessons. I'm doing maths. Dad pulls out the chair in which Sarah-Jane generally sits, and he watches me with his arms crossed. He says, "We've had a good run of it, Gideon. You've thrived, haven't you, son?" I don't know what he's talking about, and what I hear in his words makes me wary immediately. I know now what I heard must have been resignation, but at the moment I cannot put a name to what he's apprently feeling. That is when he tells me that I will be going out to school, to a C of E school that he's managed to locate, a day school not too far away. I say what first comes into my mind. "What about my playing? When will I practise?" "We'll have to work that out." "But what will happen to Sarah-Jane? She won't like it if she can't teach me." "She'll have to cope. We're getting rid of her, son. "We can't afford her any longer, Gideon." He doesn't add the rest, but I do, in my head. We can't afford her because of Sonia. "We have to cut back somewhere," Dad informs me. "We don't want to let Raphael go, and we can't let Katja go. So it's come down to Sarah-Jane." "But when will I play if I'm at school? They won't let me come to school only when I want to, will they, Dad? And there'll be rules. So how will I have my lessons?" "We've spoken to them, Gideon. They're willing to make allowances. They know the situation." "But I don't want to go! I want Sarah-Jane to keep teaching me." "So do I," Dad said. "So do we all. But it's not possible, Gideon. We haven't the money." We haven't the money. Hasn't this been the leitmotif of all of our lives? So should I be the least surprised when the Juilliard offer comes and must be rejected? Isn't it logical that I would attach my inability to attend Juilliard to money? But I am surprised. I am outraged. I am maddened. And the seed that was planted sends shoots upward, sends roots downward, and begins to multiply in the soil. I learn to hate. I acquire a need for revenge. A target for my vengeance becomes essential. I hear it at first, in her ceaseless crying and the inhuman demands she places upon everyone. And then I see it, in her, in my sister. Thinking of my mother, I dwelled upon these other thoughts as well. In considering them, I had to conclude that even if Dad had not acted to save Sonia as he might have done, what did it matter? I had begun the process of killing her. He had only allowed that process to run its course. You say to me: Gideon, you were just a little boy. This was a sibling situation. You weren't the first person who has attempted to harm a younger sibling and you won't be the last. But she died, Dr. Rose. Yes. She died. But not at your hands. I don't know that for certain. You don't know and you can't know what's true right now. But you will. Soon. You're right, Dr. Rose, as you usually are. Mother will tell me what actually happened. If there's salvation for me anywhere in the world, it will come to me from my mother. Chapter Twenty-Six "He wouldn't even take a wheelchair," the nurse in charge of casualty told them. Her name badge said she was Sister Darla Magnana and she was in high dudgeon over the manner in which Richard Davies had departed the hospital. Patients were to leave in wheelchairs, accompanied by an appropriate staff member who would see them to their vehicles. They were not meant to decline this service and if they did decline it, they were not to be discharged. This gentleman had actually walked off on his own without being discharged at all. So the hospital could not be held responsible if his injuries intensified or caused him further grief. Sister Darla Magnana hoped that was clear. "When we wish to keep someone overnight for observation, we have a very good reason for doing so," she declared. Lynley asked to speak to the doctor who'd seen Richard Davies, and from that gentleman a harassed looking resident physician with several days' growth of stubble on his face he and Havers learned the extent of Davies' injuries: a compound fracture of the right ulna, a single break of the right lateral malleolus. "Right arm and right ankle," the doctor translated for Havers when she said, "Fractures of the whats?" He went on to say, "Cuts and abrasions on the hands. A possible concussion. He needed some stitches on the face. Overall, he was very lucky, however. It could have been fatal." Lynley thought about this as he and Havers left the hospital, having been told that Richard had departed in the company of a heavily pregnant woman. They went to the Bentley, phoned in to Leach, and learned from him that Winston Nkata had given the incident room Noreen McKay's name to be put through the DVLA. Leach had the results: Noreen McKay owned a late model Toyota RAV4. That was her only vehicle. "If we get no joy from those prison records, we're back to the Humber," Leach said. "Bring that car in for a once over." Lynley said, "Right. And as to Eugenie Davies' computer, sir?" "Deal with that later. After we get our hands on that car. And talk to Foster. I want to know where she was this afternoon." "Surely not pushing her fiance under a bus," Lynley said, despite his better judgement which told him not to do or say anything that might remind Leach of Lynley's own transgressions. "In her condition, she'd be rather conspicuous to witnesses." "Just deal with her, Inspector. And get that car." Leach recited Jill Foster's address. It was a flat in Shepherd's Bush. Directory enquiries gave Lynley a phone number to go along with the address, and within a minute he knew what he'd already assumed when Leach gave him the assignment: Jill wasn't at home. She'd have taken Davies to his own flat in South Kensington. As they were spinning down Park Lane in preparation for the last leg of the trip from Gower Street, Havers said, "You know, Inspector, we're down to Gideon or Robson shoving Davies into the street this evening. But if either one of them did the job, the basic question remains, doesn't it? Why?" "It's the operative word," Lynley said. She obviously heard his doubts because she said, "You don't think either of them pushed him, do you?" "Killers nearly always choose the same means," Lynley pointed out. "But a bus is a vehicle," Havers said. "But it's not a car and driver. And it's not that car, the Humber. Or any vintage car for that matter. Nor was the hit as serious as the others, considering what it could have been." "And no one saw the shove," Havers said thoughtfully. "At least so far." "I'm betting no one saw it at all, Havers." "Okay. So we're back to Davies again. Davies tracking down Kathleen Waddington before going after Eugenie. Davies setting his sights on Webberly to guide our suspicion onto Katja Wolff when we don't get there fast enough. Davies then throwing himself into the traffic because he's got the sense we're not taking Wolff seriously as a suspect. All right. I see. But why's the question." "Because of Gideon. It has to be. Because she was threatening Gideon in some way and he lives for Gideon. If, as you suggested, Barbara, she actually meant to stop him playing ' "I like the idea, but what was it to her? I mean, if anything, it seems that she'd want to keep him playing, not stop him, right? She had a history of his whole career up in her attic. She obviously cared that he played. Why cock it up?" "Perhaps cocking it up wasn't her intention," Lynley said. "But perhaps cocking it up was what would have happened without her knowing it -if she met Gideon again." "So Davies killed her? Why not just tell her the truth? Why not just say, "Hang on, old girl. "F you see Gideon, he's done for, professionally speaking." "Perhaps he did say that," Lynley pointed out. "And perhaps she said, "I've no choice, Richard. It's been years and it's time .. ." ' "For what?" Havers asked. "A family reunion? An explanation of why she ran off in the first place? An announcement that she was going to hook up with Major Wiley? What?" "Something," Lynley said. "Something that we may never find out." "Which toasts our muffins good and proper," Havers noted. "And doesn't go very far towards putting Richard Davies in the nick. If he's our man. And we've got sod all evidence of that. He has an alibi, Inspector. Hasn't he?" "Asleep. With Jill Foster. Who was, herself, most likely asleep. So he could have gone and returned without her knowledge, Havers, using her car and then bringing it back." "We're at the car again." "It's the only thing we have." "Right. Well. The CPS aren't likely to do back flips over that, Inspector. Access to the car's not exactly hard evidence." "Access isn't," Lynley agreed. "But it's not access alone that I'm depending on." Gideon 20 NOVEMBER I saw Dad before he looked up and saw me. He was coming along the pavement in Chalcot Square, and I could tell from his posture that he was brooding. I felt some concern but no alarm. Then something odd happened. Raphael appeared at the far end of the garden in the centre of the square. He must have called out to Dad, because Dad hesitated on the pavement, turned, and then waited for him a few doors away from my own house. As I watched from the music room window, they exchanged a few words, Dad doing the talking. As he spoke, Raphael staggered back two steps, his face crumpling the way a man's face crumples when he's received a punch to the gut. Dad continued to talk. Raphael turned back towards the garden. Dad watched as Raphael walked back through the gates to where two wooden benches face each other. He sat. No, he dropped, all of his weight falling in a mass that was merely bones and flesh, reaction incarnate. I should have known then. But I did not. Dad walked on, at which point he looked up and saw me watching from the window. He raised a hand but didn't wait for me to respond. In a moment, he disappeared beneath me and I heard the sound of his key in the lock of my front door. When he came into the music room, he removed his coat and laid it deliberately along the back of a chair. "What's Raphael doing?" I asked him. "Has something happened?" He looked at me, and I could see that his face was awash with sorrow. "I've some news," he told me, 'some very bad news." "What?" I felt fear lap against my skin. "There's no easy way to tell you," he said. "Then tell me." "Your mother's dead, son." "But you said she's been phoning you. About what happened at Wigmore Hall. She can't be ' "She was killed last night, Gideon. She was hit by a car in West Hampstead. The police rang me this morning." He cleared his throat and squeezed his temples as if to contain an emotion there. "They asked if I would try to identify her body. I looked. I couldn't tell for certain .. . It's been years since I saw her .. ." He made an aimless gesture. "I'm so sorry, son." "But she can't be .. . If you didn't recognise her, perhaps it's not ' "The woman was carrying your mother's identification. Driving licence, credit cards, cheque book. What are the possibilities that someone else would have had all of Eugenie's identification?" "So you said it was her? You said it was my mother?" "I said I didn't know, that I couldn't be sure. I gave them the name of her dentist.. . the man she used to see when we were still together. They'll be able to check that way. And there are fingerprints, I suppose." "Did you ring her?" I asked. "Did she know I wanted to .. . Was she willing.. . ?" But what was the point of asking, the point of knowing? What did it matter, if she was dead? "I left a message for her, son. She hadn't got back to me yet." "That's it, then." His head had been dropped forward, but he raised it, then. "That's what?" he asked. "There's no one to tell me." "I've told you." "No." "Gideon, for God's sake .. ." ' You've told me what you think will make me believe that I'm not at fault. But you'd say anything to get me back on the violin." "Gideon, please." "No." Everything was becoming so much clearer. It was as if the shock of learning of her death suddenly blew the fog from my mind. I said, "It doesn't make sense that Katja Wolff would have agreed to your plan. That she would give up twenty years of her life .. . for what, Dad? For me? For you? I wasn't anything to her and neither were you. Isn't that true? You weren't her lover. You weren't the father of her child. Raphael was, wasn't he? So it makes no sense that she agreed. You must have tricked her. You must have .. . what? Planted evidence? Twisted the facts?" "How the hell can you accuse me of that?" "Because I see it. Because I understand. Because how would Granddad have reacted, Dad, to the news that his freak of a granddaughter had just been drowned by her freak of a brother? And that's what it must have come down to in the end: Keep the truth from Granddad no matter what." "She was a willing participant because of the money. Twenty thousand pounds for admitting to a negligent act that led to Sonia's death. I explained all that. I told you that we didn't expect the press's reaction to the case or the Crown Prosecution's passion to put her in prison. We had no idea ' "You did it to protect me. And all your talk about leaving Sonia in the bath to die of holding her down yourself is just that: talk. It serves the same purpose as letting Katja Wolff take the blame twenty years ago. It keeps me playing the violin. Or at least it's supposed to." "What are you saying?" "You know what I'm saying. It's over. Or it will be once I collect the money to pay Katja Wolff her four hundred thousand pounds." "No! You don't owe her .. . For God's sake, think. She may well have been the person who ran over your mother!" I stared at him. My mouth said the word, "What?" but my voice did not. And my brain could not take in what he was saying. He continued to talk, saying words that I heard but did not assimilate. Hit and run, I heard. No accident, Gideon. A car ploughing over her twice. Three times. A deliberate death. Indeed, a murder. "I didn't have the money to pay her," he said. "You didn't know who she was. So she would have tracked down your mother next. And when Eugenie hadn't the money to pay her .. . You see what happened, don't you? You do see what happened?" They were words falling against my ears, but they meant nothing to me. I heard them, but I didn't comprehend. All I knew was that my hope for deliverance from my crime was gone. For if I had been unable to believe anything else, I did believe in her. I did believe in my mother. Why? you ask. Because she left us, Dr. Rose. And while she might indeed have left us because she couldn't come to terms with her grief over my sister's death, I believe that she left us because she couldn't come to terms with the lie she'd have had to live should she have stayed. 20 NOVEMBER 2:00 P.M. Dad departed when it became apparent that I had finished talking. But I was alone ten minutes only perhaps even less when Raphael took his place. He looked like hell. Blood red traced a curve along his lower eye lashes. That and flesh in a shade like ashes were the only colours in his face. He came to me and put his hand on my shoulder. We faced each other and I watched his features begin to dissolve, as if he had no skull beneath his skin to hold him together but rather a substance that had always been soluble, vulnerable to the right element that could melt it. He said, "She wouldn't stop punishing herself. "His hand tightened and tightened on my shoulder. I wanted to cry out or jerk back from the pain, but I couldn't move because I couldn't risk even a gesture that might make him stop talking. "She couldn't forgive herself, Gideon, but she never she never, I swear it, stopped thinking of you." "Thinking of me?" I repeated numbly as I tried to absorb what he was saying. "How do you know? How do you know she never stopped thinking .. . ?" His face gave me the answer before he spoke it. He'd not lost contact with my mother in all the years that she'd been gone from our lives. He'd never stopped talking to her on the phone. He'd never stopped seeing her: in pubs, restaurants, hotel lounges, parks, and museums. She would say, "Tell me how Gideon is getting on, Raphael," and he would supply her with the information that newspapers, critical reviews of my playing, magazine articles, and gossip within the community of classical musicians couldn't give her. "You've seen her," I said. "You've seen her. Why?" "Because she loved you." "No. I mean, why did you do it?" "She wouldn't let me tell you," he said brokenly. "Gideon, she swore she would stop our meetings if she ever learned that I'd told you I'd seen her." "And you couldn't bear that, could you?" I said bitterly because finally I understood it all. I'd seen the answers in those long ago flowers he'd brought to her and I read it in his reaction now, when she was gone and he could no longer entertain the fantasy that there might be something of significance that would bloom one day between them. "Because if she stopped seeing you, then what would happen to your little dream?" He said nothing. "You were in love with her. Isn't that right, Raphael? You've always been in love with her. And seeing her once a month, once a week, once a day, or once a year had nothing to do with anything but what you wanted and hoped to get. So you wouldn't tell me. You just let me believe she walked out on us and never looked back, and never cared to look back. When all the time you knew I couldn't go on. "It's the way she wanted it," he said. "I had to honour her choice." "You had to nothing." "I'm sorry," he said. "Gideon, if I'd known.. . How was I to know?" "Tell me what happened that night." "That night?" "You know what night. Don't let's play the happy idiot now. What happened the night my sister drowned? And don't try to tell me that Katja Wolffdid it, all right? You were with her. You were arguing with her. I got into the bathroom. I held Sonia down. And then what happened?" "I don't know." "I don't believe you." "It's the truth. We came upon you in the bathroom. Katja began screaming. Your father came running. I took Katja downstairs. That's all I know. I didn't go back up when the paramedics arrived. I didn't leave the kitchen till the police turned up." "Was Sonia moving in the bathtub?" "I don't know. I don't think so. But that doesn't mean you harmed her. It never meant that." "For Christ's sake, Raphael, I held her down!" "You can't remember that. It's impossible. You were far too young. Gideon, Katja had left her alone for five or six minutes. I'd gone to talk to her and we began to argue. We stepped out of the room and into the nursery because I wanted to know what she intended to do about.. ." He faltered. He couldn't say it, even now. I said it for him. "Why the hell did you make her pregnant when you were in love with my mother?" "Blonde," was his miserable, pathetic reply. It came after a long fifteen seconds in which he did nothing but breathe erratically. "They both were blonde." "God," I whispered. "And did she let you call her Eugenie?" "Don't," he said. "It happened only once." "And you couldn't afford to let anyone know, could you? Neither of you could afford that. She couldn't afford to let anyone know she'd left Sonia alone as long as five minutes and you couldn't afford to let anyone know you'd got her pregnant while pretending you were fucking my mother." "She could have got rid of it. It would have been easy." "Nothing," I said, 'is that easy, Raphael. Except lying. And that was easy for all of us, wasn't it?" "Not for your mother," Raphael said. "That's why she left." He reached for me again, then. He put his hand on my shoulder, tightly as he had done before. He said, "She would have told you the truth, Gideon. You must believe your father in this. Your mother would have told you the truth." 21 NOVEMBER 1:30 A.M. So that is what I'm left with, Dr. Rose: an assurance only. Had she lived, had we had the opportunity to meet, she would have told me everything. She would have taken me back through my own history and corrected where my impressions were false and my memory incomplete. She would have explained the details I recall. She would have filled in the gaps. But she is dead, so she can do nothing. And what I'm left with is only what I can remember. Chapter Twenty-Seven Richard said to his son, "Gideon. What are you doing here?" Gideon said, "What's happened to you?" "Someone tried to kill him," Jill said. "He thinks it's Katja Wolff. He's afraid she'll come after you next." Gideon looked at her, then he looked at his father. He seemed, if anything, inordinately puzzled. Not shocked, Jill concluded, not horrified that Richard had nearly died, but merely puzzled. He said, "Why would Katja want to do that? It would hardly get her what she's after." "Gideon .. ." Richard said heavily. "Richard thinks she's after you as well," Jill said. "He thinks she's the one who pushed him into the traffic. He might have been killed." "Is that what he's telling you?" "My God. That's what happened," Richard countered. "What are you doing here? How long have you been here?" Gideon didn't answer at first. Instead he appeared to make a mental catalogue of his father's injuries, his gaze going first to Richard's leg, then to his arm, then coming back to rest on his face. "Gideon," Richard said. "I asked you how long ' "Long enough to find this." Gideon gestured with the card he held. Jill looked at Richard. She saw his eyes narrow. "You lied to me about this as well," Gideon said. Richard's attention was fixed on the card. He said, "Lied about what?" "About my sister. She didn't die. Not as a baby and not as a child." His hand crumpled the envelope. It dropped to the floor. Jill looked down at the photograph she was holding. She said, "But, Gideon, you know that your sister ' "You've been going through my belongings," Richard cut in. "I wanted to find her address, which I expect you have squirrelled away somewhere, haven't you? But what I found instead ' "Gideon!" Jill held out the picture Richard intended for his son. "You're not making sense. Your sister was ' "What I found," Gideon went doggedly on, shaking the card at his father, 'was this, and now I know exactly who you are: a liar who couldn't stop if he had to, Dad, if his life depended on telling the truth, if everyone's life depended upon it." "Gideon!" Jill was aghast not at the words but at the glacial tone in which Gideon spoke them. Her horror momentarily drove from her thoughts her own affront at Richard's behaviour. She pushed from her mind that Gideon was speaking the truth at least as it applied to her own life if not to his: In never mentioning Sonia's condition, Richard had indeed lied to her, if only by omission. Instead, she dwelt on the intemperance of what the son was saying to the father. "Richard was nearly killed less than three hours ago." "Are you sure of that?" Gideon asked her. "If he lied to me about Virginia, who's to know what else he's willing to lie about?" "Virginia?" Jill asked. "Who ' Richard said to his son, "We'll talk about this later." "No," Gideon said. "We're going to talk about Virginia now." Jill said, "Who is Virginia?" "Then you don't know either." Jill said, "Richard?" and turned to her fiance. "Richard, what's this all about?" "Here's what it's all about," Gideon said, and he read the inside of the card aloud. His voice carried the strength of indignation although it trembled twice: once when he read out the words our daughter and a second time when he came to lived thirty-two years. For her part, Jill heard the echo of a different two phrases reverberating round the room: She defied medical probability was one and the other comprised the first three words of the final sentence: Despite her problems. She felt a wave of sickness rise up in her, and a terrible cold worked its way into her bones. "Who is she?" she cried. "Richard, who is she?" "A freak," Gideon said. "Isn't that right, Dad? Virginia Davies was another freak." "What does he mean?" Jill asked, although she knew, already knew and couldn't bear the knowing. She willed Richard to answer her question, but he stood like granite, bent-shouldered, crooked-backed, with his eyes fixed steadily on his son. "Say something!" Jill cried. "He's thinking how to shape an answer for you," Gideon told her. "He's wondering what excuse he can make for letting me think my older sister died as a baby. There was something badly wrong with her, you see. And I expect it was easier to pretend she was dead than to have to accept that she wasn't perfect." Richard finally spoke. "You don't know what you're talking about," he said as Jill's thoughts began to spin wildly out of control: another Down's Syndrome, the voices shouted inside her skull, a second Down's Syndrome, a second Down's Syndrome or something else something worse something he couldn't bring himself even to mention and all the while her precious Catherine was at risk for something God only knew what that the antenatal tests had not identified and he stood there just stood there and stood there and stood there and looked at his son and refused to discuss .. . Jill was aware that that picture she was holding was becoming slick in her hands, was becoming heavy, was becoming a burden she could hardly manage. It slipped from her fingers as she cried out, "Talk to me, Richard!" Richard and his son moved simultaneously as the picture clattered on the bare wood floor and Jill stepped past it, stepped around it, feeling she couldn't bear her own impossible weight a moment longer. So she stumbled to the sofa where she became a mute onlooker to what then followed. Hastily, Richard bent for the picture, but his actions were hampered by the plaster on his leg. Gideon got there first. He snatched it up, crying, "Something else, Dad?" and then he stared down at it with his fingers whitening to the colour of bone upon the wooden frame. He said hoarsely, "Where did this come from?" He raised his eyes to his father. Richard said, "You must calm down, Gideon," and he sounded desperate and Jill watched both of them and saw their tension, Richard's held like a whip in his hand, Gideon's coiled and ready to spring. Gideon said, "You told me she'd taken every picture of Sonia with her. Mother left us and she took all the pictures, you said. She took all of the pictures except that one you kept in your desk." "I had a very good reason ' "Have you had this all along?" "I have." Richard's eyes bored into his son's. "I don't believe you," Gideon said. "You said she took them and she took them. You wanted her to take them. Or you sent them to her. But you didn't have this because if you'd had it, on that day when I wanted it, when I needed to see her, when I asked you, begged you ' "Rubbish. This is bollocks. I didn't give it to you then because I thought you might ' "What? Throw myself onto the railway tracks? I didn't know then. I didn't even suspect. I was panicked about my music and so were you. So if you'd had this then, on that day, Dad, you'd have handed it over straightaway. If you thought for a moment it would get me back to the violin, you would have done anything." "Listen to me." Richard spoke rapidly. "I had that picture. I'd forgotten about it. I'd merely misplaced it among your grandfather's papers. When I saw it yesterday, I intended at once to give to you. I remembered you wanted a picture of Sonia .. . that you'd asked about one .. ." "It wouldn't be in a frame," Gideon said. "Not if it was yours. Not if you'd misplaced it among his papers." "You're twisting my words." "It would have been like the other. It would have been in an envelope or stuffed into a book or placed in a bag or lying somewhere loose but it wouldn't it wouldn't have been in a frame." "You're getting hysterical. This is what comes of psychoanalysis. I hope you see that." "What I see," Gideon cried, 'is a self-involved hypocrite who'd say anything at all, who'd do anything at all if that's what it took Gideon stopped himself. On the sofa, Jill felt the atmosphere between the two men suddenly become electric and hot. Her own thoughts were charging round madly in her head, so at first when Gideon spoke again, she didn't comprehend his meaning. "It was you," he said. "Oh my God. You killed her. You had spoken to her. You had asked her to support your lies about Sonia but she wouldn't do that, would she? So she had to die." "For the love of God, Gideon. You don't know what you're saying." "I do. For the first time in my life, I do. She was going to tell me the truth, wasn't she? You didn't think she would, you were so certain she'd go along with anything you planned because she did at first, all those years ago. But that's not who she was and why the hell did you think it might be? She'd left us, Dad. She couldn't live a lie and live with us, so she walked out. It was too much for her, knowing that we'd sent Katja to prison." "She agreed to go. She was party to it all." "But not to twenty years," Gideon said. "Katja Wolff wouldn't have been party to that. To five years, perhaps. Five years and one hundred thousand pounds, all right. But twenty years? No one expected it. And Mother couldn't live with it, could she? So she left us and she would have stayed away forever had I not lost my music at Wigmore Hall." "You've got to stop thinking that Wigmore Hall is connected to anything but Wigmore Hall. I've told you that from the first." "Because you wanted to believe it," Gideon said. "But the truth is that Mother was going to tell me that my memory wasn't lying to me, wasn't she, Dad? She knew I killed Sonia. She knew I did it alone." "You didn't. I've told you. I explained what happened." "Tell me again, then. In front of Jill." Richard said nothing although he cast a look at Jill. She wanted to see it as a look that begged for her help and her understanding. But she saw instead the calculation behind it. Richard said, "Gideon. Let's talk about this later." "We'll talk about it now. One of us will. Shall I be the one? I killed my sister, Jill. I drowned her in her bath. She was a millstone round everyone's neck ' "Gideon. Stop it." ' but especially round mine. She stood in the way of my music. I saw the world revolving round her and I couldn't cope with that so I killed her." "No!" Richard said. "Dad wants me to think ' "No!" Richard shouted. ' that he was the one, that when he came into the bathroom that evening and saw her under water in the tub, he held her there and finished the job. But he's lying about that because he knows that if I continue to believe I killed her, there's a very good chance I'll never pick up the violin again." "That's not what happened," Richard said. "Which part of it?" Richard said nothing for a moment, then, "Please," and Jill saw that he was caught between the two choices that Gideon's words had brought him to facing. And no matter which way he chose to go, both choices amounted to a single one in the end. Either he killed his child. Or he killed his child. Gideon apparently saw the answer he wanted within his father's silence. He said, "Yes. Right, then," and dropped the picture of his sister onto the floor. He strode to the door. He drew it open. "For God's sake, I did it," Richard cried out. "Gideon! Stop! Listen to me. Believe what I say. She was still alive when you left her. I held her down in the bath. I was the one who drowned Sonia." Jill caught herself in a wail of horror. It was all too logical. She knew. She saw. He was talking to his son but he was doing more: He was finally explaining to Jill what was keeping him from marriage. Gideon said, "Those are lies," and he began to leave. Richard started to go after him, hampered by his injuries. Jill struggled to her feet. She said, "They're all daughters. That's it, isn't it? Virginia. Sonia. And now Catherine." Richard stumbled to the door, leaned against the jamb. He roared, "Gideon! God damn it! Listen!" He shoved himself out into the corridor. Jill staggered after him. She cried, "You didn't want to marry because it's a daughter." She grabbed onto his arm. He was still hobbling towards the staircase, and heavy as she was, he dragged her with him. She could hear Gideon clattering downwards. His footsteps pounded across the tiled entry. "Gideon!" Richard shouted. "Wait!" "You're afraid she'll be like the other two, aren't you?" Jill cried, clinging to Richard's arm. "You created Virginia. You created Sonia and you think our baby's going to be damaged as well. That's why you haven't wanted to marry me, isn't it?" The front door opened. Richard and Jill reached the top of the stairs. Richard shouted, "Gideon! Listen to me." "I've listened long enough," came the reply. Then the front door banged closed. Richard bellowed as if struck in the chest. He started to descend. Jill dragged down on his arm. "That's why. Isn't it? You've been waiting to see if the baby's normal before you're willing to ' He shook her off. She grabbed at him again. "Get away!" he cried. "Get off me. Go! Don't you see I've got to stop him?" "Answer me. Tell me. You've thought there was something wrong because she's a daughter and if we married, then you'd be stuck. With me. With her. Just like before." "You don't know what you're saying." "Then tell me I'm wrong." "Gideon!" he shouted. "God damn it, Jill. I'm his father. He needs me. You don't know .. . Let me go." "I won't! Not until you ' "I. Said. Let. Me.. ." His teeth were clenched. His face was rigid. Jill felt his hand his good hand climb up her chest and push at her savagely. She clung to him harder, crying, "No! What are you doing? Talk to me!" She pulled him towards her, but he swung away. He jerked free and as he did so, their positions shifted precariously. He was now above her. She was below. And so she blocked him, blocked his passage to Gideon and his reentry into a life she could not afford to understand. Both of them were panting. The smell of their sweat was rank in the air. "That's why, isn't it?" Jill demanded. "I want to hear it from you, Richard." But instead of replying, he gave an inarticulate cry. Before she could move to safety, he was trying to get past her. He used his good arm against her breasts. She backed away in reflex. She lost her footing. In an instant she was tumbling down the stairs. Chapter Twenty-Eight Richard heard only the breath in his ears. She fell and he watched her and he heard banisters cracking when she hit them. And the sheer weight of her body increased her velocity so even at the meagre excuse for a landing that single inadequate slightly wider step that Jill so hated she continued to hurtle towards the ground floor. It didn't happen in a second. It happened in an arc of time so wide and so long that forever seemed inadequate for it. And every second that passed was a second in which Gideon, a Gideon able-bodied and unhampered by a plaster cast enclosing his leg from foot to knee, gained more distance from his father. But even more than distance, he gained certainty as well. And that could not be allowed. Richard descended the stairs as quickly as he could. At the bottom, Jill lay sprawled and motionless. When he reached her, her eyelids looking blue in the faint light from the entry windows fluttered, and her lips parted in a moan. "Mummy?" she whispered. Her clothing rucked up, her great huge stomach was obscenely exposed. Her coat spread above her head like a monstrous fan. "Mummy?" she whispered again. Then she groaned. And then cried out and arched her back. Richard moved to her head. Furiously, he searched through the pockets of the coat. He'd seen her put her keys in the coat, hadn't he? God damn it, he'd seen her. He had to find those keys. If he didn't, Gideon would be gone and he had to find him, had to speak to him, had to make him know .. . There were no keys. Richard cursed. He shoved himself to his feet. He went back to the stairs and began to haul himself furiously upwards. Below him, Jill cried out, "Catherine," and Richard pulled on the stair rail, and breathed like a runner and thought about how he could stop his son. Inside the flat, he looked for Jill's bag. It was by the sofa, lying on the floor. He scooped it up. He wrestled with its maddening clasp. His hands were shaking. His fingers were clumsy. He couldn't manage to A buzzer went off. He raised his head, looked round the room. But there was nothing. He went back to the bag. He managed to unfasten the clasp, and he jerked the bag open. He dumped its contents onto the sofa. A buzzer went off. He ignored it. He pawed through lipsticks, powder, chequebook, purse, crumpled tissues, pens, a small notebook, and there they were. Hooked together by the familiar chrome ring: five keys, two brass, three silver. One for her flat, one for his, one for the family home in Wiltshire, and two for the Humber, ignition and boot. He grabbed them. A buzzer went off. Long, loud, insistent this time. Demanding immediate acknowledgement. He cursed, located the buzzing at its source. The front bell on the street. Gideon? God, Gideon? But he had his own key. He wouldn't ring. The buzzing continued. Richard ignored it. He made for the door. The buzzing faded. The buzzing stopped. In his ears, Richard heard only his breathing. It sounded like the shriek of lost souls, and pain began to accompany it, searing up his right leg and, simultaneously, burning and throbbing from right hand to shoulder. His side began to ache with the exertion. He didn't seem able to catch his breath. At the top of the stairs, he paused, looked down. His heart was pounding. His chest was heaving. He drew in air, stale and damp. He began to descend. He clutched onto the rail. Jill hadn't moved. Could she? Would she? It hardly mattered. Not with Gideon on the run. "Mummy? Will you help?" Her voice was faint. But Mummy was not here. Mummy could not help. But Daddy was. Daddy could. He would always be there. Not as in the past, that figure cloaked by an artful madness that came and went and stood between Daddy and yes my son you are my son. But Daddy in the present who could not did not would not fail because yes my son you are my son. You, what you do, what you're capable of doing. All of it you. You are my son. Richard reached the landing. Below him, he heard the entry door open. He called out, "Gideon?" "Bloody sodding hell!" came a woman's reply. A squat creature in a navy donkey-jacket seemed to fling herself at Jill. Behind her came a rain coated figure whom Richard Davies recognised only too well. He held a credit card in his hand, the means by which he'd gained access through the warped old door to Braemar Mansions. "Good God," Lynley said, dashing over to kneel by Jill as well. "Phone an ambulance, Havers." He handed her a mobile. Then he raised his head. At once his eyes came to rest on Richard, midway down the stairs, Jill's car keys in his hand. Havers rode with Jill Foster to hospital. Lynley took Richard Davies to the nearest police station. This turned out to be in the Earl's Court Road, the same station from which Malcolm Webberly had departed more than twenty years ago on the evening he was assigned to investigate the suspicious drowning of Sonia Davies. If Richard Davies was aware of the irony involved therein, he didn't mention it. Indeed, he said nothing, as was his right, when Lynley gave him the official caution. The duty solicitor was brought in to advise him but the only advice Davies asked for was how he could get a message to his son. "I must speak to Gideon," he said to the solicitor. "Gideon Davies. You've heard of him. The violinist .. . ?" Other than that, he had nothing to say. He would stand by his original story, given to Lynley during earlier interviews. He knew his rights and the police had nothing on which to build a case against the father of Gideon Davies. What they had, however, was the Humber, and Lynley went back to Cornwall Gardens with the official team to oversee the acquisition of that vehicle. As Winston Nkata had predicted, what damage the car had sustained in striking two and probably three individuals was centred round its front chrome bumper which was fairly mangled. But this was something that any adroit defence lawyer would be able to argue away and consequently Lynley was not depending upon it to build a case against Richard Davies. What he was depending upon and what that same adroit barrister would find difficult to discount was trace evidence both beneath the bumper and upon the undercarriage of the Humber. For it was hardly possible that Davies could strike Kathleen Waddington and Malcolm Webberly and run over his former wife three times and leave not a deposit of blood, a fragment of clothing, a sliver of skin, or the kind of hair they desperately needed hair with human scalp attached to it on the underside of the car. To get rid of that sort of evidence, Davies would have had to think of that possibility. And Lynley was betting that he hadn't done so. No killer, he knew from long experience, ever thought of everything. He phoned the news to DCI Leach and asked him to pass the message along to AC Hillier. He would wait in Cornwall Gardens to see the Humber safely off the street, he said, after which he'd fetch Eugenie Davies' computer as had been his original destination. Did DCI Leach still wish him to fetch that computer? He did, Leach told him. Despite the arrest, Lynley was still out of order for having taken it and it needed to be logged among the belongings of the victim. "Anything else you lifted, while we're at it?" Leach asked shrewdly. Lynley said there was nothing else belonging to Eugenie Davies that he had taken, nothing at all. And he was content with the truth of this answer. For he had come to understand for better or worse that the words born of passion which a man puts on paper and sends to a woman indeed, even those words that he speaks are on loan to her only, for whatever length of time serves their purpose. The words themselves always belong to the man. "He didn't push me," was what Jill Foster said to Barbara Havers in the ambulance. "You mustn't think that he pushed me." Her voice was faint, a weak murmur only, and her lower body was soiled from the pool of urine, water, and blood that had been spreading out beneath her when Barbara knelt by her side at the foot of the stairs. But that was all she was able to say because pain was taking her or at least that was how it seemed to Barbara as she heard Jill cry out and she watched the ambulance man monitor the woman's vital signs and listened to him say to the driver, "Hit the sirens, Cliff," which was explanation enough of Jill Foster's condition. "The baby?" Barbara asked the medic in a low voice. He cast her a look, said nothing, and moved his gaze to the IV bag he'd fixed to a pole above his patient. Even with the siren, the ride to the nearest hospital with a casualty ward seemed endless to Barbara. But once they arrived, the response was immediate and gratifying. The paramedics trundled their charge inside the building at a run. There, she was met by a swarm of personnel, who whisked her away calling out for equipment, for phone calls to be made to obstetrics, for obscure drugs and arcane procedures with names that camouflaged their purposes. "Is she going to make it?" Barbara asked anyone who would listen. "She's in labour, right? She's okay? The baby?" "This is not how babies are intended to get born," was the only reply that Barbara was able to obtain. She remained in casualty, pacing the waiting area, till Jill Foster was taken in a rush to an operating theatre. "She's been through enough trauma," was the explanation she was given and "Are you family?" was the reason that nothing else was revealed. Barbara couldn't have said why she felt it was important for her to know that the woman was going to be all right. She put it down to an unusual sisterhood she found herself feeling for Jill Foster. It had not, after all, been so many months since Barbara herself had been whisked away by an ambulance after her own encounter with a killer. She didn't believe that Richard Davies had not pushed Jill Foster down the stairs. But that was something to be sorted out later, once a recovery period gave the other woman time to learn what else her fiance had been up to. And she would recover, Barbaralearned within the hour. She'd been delivered of a daughter: healthy despite her precipitate entry into the world. Barbara felt she could leave at that point, and she was doing so -indeed she was out in front of the hospital and sussing out what buses, if any, served Fulham Palace Road when she saw that she was standing in front of Charing Cross Hospital, where Superintendent Webberly was a patient. She ducked back inside. On the eleventh floor, she waylaid a nurse just outside the intensive care ward. Critical and unchanged were the words the nurse used to describe the superintendent's condition, from which Barbara inferred that he was still in a coma, still on life support, and still in so much danger of so many further complications that praying for his recovery seemed as risky a business as thinking about the possibility of his death. When people were struck by cars, when they sustained injuries to the brain, more often than not they emerged from the crisis radically altered. Barbara didn't know if she wished such a change upon her superior officer. She didn't want him to die. She dreaded the thought of it. But she couldn't imagine him caught up in months or years of torturous convalescence. She said to the nurse, "Is his family with him? I'm one of the officers investigating what happened. I've news for them. If they'd like to hear it, that is." The nurse eyed Barbara doubtfully. Barbara sighed and fished out her warrant card. The nurse squinted at it and said, "Wait here, then," leaving Barbara waiting to see what would happen next. Barbara expected AC Hillier to emerge from the ward, but instead it was Webberly's daughter who came to greet her. Miranda looked just about done in, but she smiled and said, "Barbara! Hello! How very good of you to come. You can't still be on duty at this hour." Barbara said, "We've made an arrest. Will you tell your dad? I mean, I know he can't hear you or anything .. . Still, you know .. ." "Oh, but he can hear," Miranda said. Barbara's hopes rose. "He's come out of it?" "No. Not that. But the doctors say that people in comas can hear what's being said round them. And he'll certainly want to know that you've caught who hit him, won't he?" "How is he?" Barbara asked. "I talked to a nurse, but I couldn't get much. Just that there wasn't any change yet." Miranda smiled, but it seemed a response that was generated to soothe Barbara's worries more than a reflection of what the girl herself was feeling. "There isn't, really. But he hasn't had another heart attack, which everyone considers a very good sign. So far he's been stable, and we're.. . well, we're very hopeful. Yes. We're quite hopeful." Her eyes were too bright, too frightened. Barbara wanted to tell Miranda that she had no need to play the part for her sake, but she understood that the girl's attempt at optimism was more for herself than anyone else. She said, "Then I'll be hopeful as well. We all will. D'you need anything?" "Oh gosh, no. At least, I don't think so. I did come from Cambridge in a terrible rush and I've left a paper behind that I have due for a supervision. But that's not till next week and perhaps by then .. . Well, perhaps." "Yeah. Perhaps." Footsteps coming along the corridor diverted their attention. They turned to see AC Hillier and his wife approaching. Between them, they were supporting Frances Webberly. Miranda cried out, "Mum!" "Randie," Frances said. "Randie, darling .. ." Miranda said again, "Mum! I'm so glad. Oh, Mum." She went to her and hugged her long and hard. And then, perhaps feeling a weight lifting off her that she should never have had to bear in the first place, she began to cry. She said, "The doctors said if he has another heart attack, he might ... He really might ' "Hush. Yes," Frances Webberly said, her cheek pressed against her daughter's hair. "Take me in to see Daddy, won't you, dear? We'll sit with him together." When Miranda and her mother had gone through the door, AC Hillier said to his wife, "Stay with them, Laura. Please. Make sure ..." and nodded meaningfully. Laura Hillier followed them. The AC eyed Barbara with a mere degree less than his usual level of disapproval. She became acutely aware of her clothing. She'd been doing her best to stay out of his way for months now, and when she'd known she'd be running into him, she'd always managed to dress with that expectation in mind. But now .. . She felt her high top red trainers take on neon proportions and the green stirrup trousers she'd donned that morning seemed only marginally less inappropriate. She said, "We've made the arrest, sir. I thought I'd come to tell ' "Leach phoned me." Hillier walked to a door across the corridor and inclined his head at it. She was meant to follow. When they were inside what turned out to be a waiting room, he went to a sofa and sank into it. For the first time, Barbara noted how tired he looked and she realised he'd been on family duty since the middle of the previous night. Her guard slipped a notch upon this thought. Hillier had always seemed superhuman. He said, "Good work, Barbara. Both of you." She said cautiously, "Thank you, sir," and waited for what would happen next. He said, "Sit." She said, "Sir," and although she'd have preferred to be off on her way home, she went to a chair of limited comfort and perched on its edge. In a better world, she thought, AC Hillier would at this moment of emotional in extremis see the error of his ways. He'd look at her, recognise her finer qualities one of which was decidedly not her fashion sense and he'd summarily acknowledge them. He'd elevate her on the spot to her previous professional position and that would be the end of the punishment he'd inflicted upon her at the end of the summer. But this was not a better world, and AC Hillier did none of that. He merely said, "He might not make it. We're pretending otherwise -especially round Frances, for what little good it's doing but it's got to be faced." Barbara didn't know what to say, so she murmured, "Bloody hell," because that's what she felt: bloody, bowed, and consigned to helplessness. And sentenced, with the rest of mankind, to interminable waiting. "I've known him ages," Hillier said. "There've been times when I haven't much liked him and God knows I've never understood him, but he's been there for years, a presence that I could somehow depend upon, just to ... to be there. And I find I don't like the thought of his going." "Perhaps he won't go," Barbara said. "Perhaps he'll recover." Hillier shot her a look. "You don't recover from something like this. He may live. But recover? No. He'll not be the same. He'll not recover." He crossed one leg over the other, which was the first time Barbara noticed his clothes, which were what he'd thrown on the night before and had never got round to changing during the day. And she saw him for once not as superior but as human being: in hound's-tooth and Tattersall, with a pullover that had a hole in the cuff. He said, "Leach tells me it was all done to divert suspicion." "Yes. That's what DI Lynley and I think." "What a waste." And then he peered at her. "There's nothing else?" "What do you mean?" "No other reason behind Malcolm's being hit?" She met his gaze steadily and read the question behind it, the one that asked if what AC Hillier assumed, believed, or wanted to believe about the Webberly marriage and its partners therein was really true. And Barbara didn't intend to give the assistant commissioner any part of that piece of information. She said, "No other reason. Turns out the superintendent was just easy for Davies to track down." "That's what you think," Hillier said. "Leach told me Davies himself isn't talking." "I expect he'll talk eventually," Barbara said. "He knows better than most where keeping mum can get you." I've made Lynley acting superintendent till this is sorted out," Hillier said. "You know that, don't you?" "Dee Harriman passed along the word." Barbara drew in a breath and held it, hoping, wishing, and dreaming for what did not then come. Instead he said, "Winston Nkata does good work, doesn't he, all things considered." What things? she wondered. But she said, "Yes, sir. He does good work." "He'll be looking at a promotion soon." "He'll be glad of that, sir." "Yes. I expect he will." Hillier looked at her long, then he looked away. His eyes closed. His head rested back against the chair. Barbara sat there in silence, wondering what she was meant to do. She finally settled on saying, "You ought to go home and get some sleep, sir." "I intend to," Hillier replied. "We all should, Constable Havers." It was half past ten when Lynley parked in Lawrence Street and walked back round the corner to the St. James house. He hadn't phoned ahead to let them know he was coming, and on the way down from the Earl's Court Road, he'd determined that if the ground floor lights in the house were off, he wouldn't disturb its occupants. This was, he knew, in large part cowardice. The time was fast approaching when he was going to have to deal with harvesting the crop he'd long ago sown, and he didn't particularly want to do that. But he'd seen how his past was seeping insidiously into his present, and he knew that he owed the future he wanted an exorcism that could only be managed if he spoke. Still, he would have liked to put it off and as he rounded the corner, he hoped for darkness in the house's windows as a sign that further procrastination was acceptable. He had no such luck. Not only was the light above the front door blazing, but the windows of St. James's study cast yellow shafts onto the wrought-iron fence that edged the property. He mounted the steps and rang the bell. Inside the house, the dog barked in response. She was still barking when Deborah St. James opened the door. She said, "Tommy! Good Lord, you're soaked. What a night. Have you forgotten your umbrella? Peach, here. Stop it at once." She scooped the barking little dachshund from the floor and tucked her under her arm. "Simon's not in," she confided, 'and Dad's watching a documentary about dormice, don't ask me why. So she's taking guard duty more seriously than usual. Peach, none of your growling, now." Lynley stepped inside and removed his wet coat. He hung it on the rack to the right of the door. He extended his hand to the dog for purposes of olfactory identification, and Peach ceased both barking and growling and indicated her willingness to accept his obeisance in the form of a few scratches behind her ears. "She's impossibly spoiled," Deborah said. "She's doing her job. You shouldn't just open the door like that at night anyway, Deb. It's not very wise." "I always assume that if a burglar's calling, Peach will go for his ankles before he can get into the first room. Not that we have much worth taking, although I wouldn't mind seeing the last of that hideous thing with peacock feathers that sits on the sideboard in the dining room." She smiled. "How are you, Tommy? I'm in here. Working." She led him into the study where, he saw, she was in the process of wrapping the pictures she'd selected for her December show. The floor was spread with framed photographs yet to be protected by plastic, along with a bottle of window cleaner that she'd been using to see to the glass that covered them, a roll of kitchen towel, myriad sheets of bubble-wrap, tape, and scissors. She'd lit the gas fire in the room, and Peach repaired to her ramshackle basket that stood before it. "It's an obstacle course," Deborah said, 'but if you can find your way to the trolley, have some more of Simon's whisky." "Where is he?" Lynley asked. He worked his way round her photographs and went to the drinks trolley. "He went to alecture at the Royal Geographic Society: somebody's journey somewhere and a book signing to follow. I think there are polar bears involved. In the lecture, that is." Lynley smiled. He tossed down a hefty gulp of the whisky. It would do for courage. To give himself time for the spirits to work in his bloodstream, he said, "We've made an arrest in the case I've been working on." "It didn't take you long. You know, you're completely suited to police work, Tommy. Who would ever have thought it, the way you grew up?" She rarely mentioned his upbringing. A child of privilege born to another child of privilege, he'd long chafed beneath the burdens of blood, family history, and his duties to both. The thought of it now family, useless titles that were every year rendered more meaningless, velvet capes trimmed in ermine, and more than two hundred and fifty years of lineage always determining what his next move should be served as a stark reminder of what he had come to tell her and why. Still, he stalled, saying, "Yes. Well. One always has to move quickly in a homicide. If the trail begins to cool, you stand less chance of making an arrest. I've come for that computer, by the way. The one I left with Simon. Is it still up in the lab? May I fetch it, Deb?" "Of course," she said although she gave him a curious glance, either at his choice of subject considering her husband's line of work, she was more than aware of the need for speed in a murder investigation or the tone with which he spoke about it, which was too hardy to be at all believable. She said, "Go on up. You don't mind my carrying on down here, do you?" He said, "Not at all," and made his escape, taking his time to trudge up the stairs to the top floor of the house. There, he flipped on the lights in the lab and found the computer exactly where St. James had left it. He unplugged it, cradled it in his arms, and went back down the stairs. He placed it by the front door and considered calling out a cheerful goodnight and going on his way. It was late, after all, and the conversation that he needed to have with Deborah St. James could wait. Just as he was thinking of another postponement, though, Deborah came to the study door and observed him. She said, "All's not right with your world. There's nothing wrong with Helen, is there?" And Lynley found at last that he couldn't avoid no matter how much he wanted to. He said, "No. There's nothing wrong with Helen." "I'm glad," she said. "The first months of pregnancy can be awful." He opened his mouth to reply but lost the words. Then he found them again. "So you know." She smiled. "I couldn't help knowing. After .. . what is it, now? seven pregnancies? .. . I've become pretty well-attuned to the signs. I never got far in them the pregnancies, I mean .. . well, you know that but far enough to feel that I'd never get over being sick." Lynley swallowed. Deborah went back into the study. He followed her, found the glass of whisky where he'd left it, and took a momentary refuge in its depths. He said when he could, "We know how you want.. . And how you've tried .. . You and Simon .. ." "Tommy," she said firmly, "I'm pleased for you. You mustn't ever think that my situation Simon's and mine .. . well, no ... mine, really -would ever keep me from feeling happiness for yours. I know what this means to you both, and the fact that I'm not able to carry a baby .. . Well, it's painful, yes. Of course it's painful. But I don't want the rest of the world to wallow round in my grief. And I surely don't want to put anyone else in my situation just for the company." She knelt among her photographs. She seemed to have dismissed the subject, but Lynley could not because, as far as he was concerned, they had not yet come to the real topic. He went to sit opposite her, in the leather chair St. James used when he was in the room. He said, "Deb," and when she looked up, "There's something else." Her green eyes darkened. "What else?" "Santa Barbara." "Santa Barbara?" "That summer when you were eighteen, when you were at school at the institute. That year when I made those four trips to see you: October, January, May, and July. July, especially, when we drove the coastal road into Oregon." She said nothing, but her face blanched, so he knew that she understood where he was heading. Even as he headed there, he wished that something would happen to stop him so he wouldn't have to admit to her what he could hardly bear to face himself. "You said it was the car on that trip," he told her. "You weren't used to so much driving. Or perhaps it was the food, you said. Or the change in climate. Or the heat when it was hot outside or the cool when it was cold indoors. You weren't used to being in and out of air conditioning so much, and aren't Americans addicted to their air conditioners? I listened to every excuse you made, and I chose to believe you. But all the time.. ." He didn't wish to say it, would have given anything to avoid it. But at the last moment, he forced himself to admit what he'd long pushed from his mind. "I knew." She lowered her gaze. Her saw her reach out for the scissors and bubble wrap, pulling one of her pictures towards her. She did nothing with it. "After that trip, I waited for you to tell me," he said. "What I thought was that when you told me, we'd decide together what we wanted to do. We're in love, so I we'll marry, I told myself. As soon as Deb admits that she's pregnant." "Tommy .. ." "Let me go on. This has been years in the making and now we're here, I have to see it through." "Tommy, you can't ' "I always knew. I think I knew the night that it happened. That night in Montecito." She said nothing. He said, "Deborah. Please tell me." "It's no longer important." "It is important to me." "Not after all this time." "Yes. After all this time. Because I did nothing. Don't you see? I knew, but I did nothing. I just left you to face it alone, whatever "it" was going to be. You were the woman I loved, the woman I wanted, and I ignored what was happening because .. ." He became aware that still she wasn't looking at him, her face fully hidden by the angle of her head and the way her hair fell round her shoulders. But he didn't stop speaking because he finally understood what had motivated him then, what was indeed the source of his shame. "Because I couldn't sort out how to work it," he said. "Because I hadn't planned it to happen like that and God help anything that stood in the way of how I planned my life to work out. And as long as you said nothing about it, I could let the entire situation slide, let everything slide, let my whole damned life slide right on by without the least inconvenience to me. Ultimately, I could even pretend that there was no baby. I could tell myself that, surely if there was, you'd have said something. And when you didn't, I allowed myself to believe I'd been mistaken. When all the time I knew at heart that I hadn't. So I said nothing throughout July. In August. September. And whatever you faced when you finally made your decision to act, you faced alone." "It was my responsibility." "It was ours. Our child. Our responsibility. But I left you there. And I'm sorry." "There's no need to be." "There is. Because when you and Simon married, when you lost all those babies, what I had to think was that if you'd had that first child, ours ' "Tommy, no!" She raised her head. ' then none of this would have happened to you." "That's not how it was," she said. "Believe me. That's not how it is. You've no need to punish yourself over this. You've no obligation to me." "Now, perhaps not. But then I did." "No. And it wouldn't have mattered, anyway. You could have spoken about it, yes. You could have phoned. You could have returned on the very next plane, and confronted me with what you believed was going on. But nothing would have changed with all that. Oh, we might have married in a rush or something. You might even have stayed with me in Santa Barbara so that I could finish at the institute. But at the end of it all, there still wouldn't have been a baby. Not mine and yours. Not mine and Simon's. Not mine and anyone's as it turns out." "What do you mean?" She leaned back on her heels, setting the scissors and the tape to one side. She said, "Just what I say. There wouldn't have been a baby no matter what I did. I just didn't wait long enough to find that out." She blinked rapidly and turned her head to look hard at the bookshelves. After a moment, she returned her gaze to him. "I would have lost our baby as well, Tommy. It's something called balanced translocation." "What is?" "My .. . what do I call it? My problem? Condition? Situation?" She offered him a shaky smile. "Deborah, what are you telling me?" "That I can't have a baby. I'll never be able to have one. It's incredible to think that a single chromosome could hold such power, but there you have it." She pressed her fingers to her chest, saying, "Phenotype: normal in every way. Genotype .. . Well, when one has "excessive foetal wastage" that's what they call it... all the miscarriages .. . isn't that obscene? there's got to be a medical reason. In my case, it's genetics: One arm of the twenty-first chromosome is upside down." "My God," he said. "Deb, I'm ' "Simon doesn't know yet," she said quickly, as if to stop him from going on. "And I'd rather he not just now. I did promise him that I'd let a full year go by before having any more tests and I'd like him to think I've kept that promise. I intended to. But last June .. . that case you were working on when the little girl died .. . ? I just had to know after that, Tommy. I don't know why except that I was.. . well, I was so struck by her death. Its uselessness. The terrible shame and waste of it, this sweet little life gone ... So I went back to the doctor then. But Simon doesn't know." "Deborah," Lynley said quietly. "I am so terribly sorry." Her eyes filled at that. She blinked the tears back furiously, then shook her head just as furiously when he reached out to her. "No. It's fine. I'm fine. I mean, I'm all right. Most of the time I don't think about it. And we're going through the process of adoption. We've filled out so many applications ... all this paperwork .. . that we're bound to ... at some time. And we're trying in other countries as well. I just wish it could be different for Simon's sake. It's selfish and I know it, it's all sorts of ego, but I wanted us to create a child together. I think he wanted .. . would have liked that as well, but he's too good to say so directly." And then she smiled, despite one large tear that she couldn't contain. "You're not to think I'm not all right, Tommy. I am. I've learned that things work out the way they're meant to work out, no matter what we want so it's best to keep our wants to a minimum and to thank our stars, our luck, or our gods that we've been given as much as we have." "But this doesn't absolve me from my part in what happened," he told her. "Back then. In Santa Barbara. My going off and never saying a word. This doesn't absolve me of that, Deb." "No, this doesn't," she agreed. "It doesn't at all. But, Tommy, you must believe me. I do." Helen was waiting for him when he got home. She was already in bed with a book lying open in her lap. But she'd dozed off while she was reading, and her head rested back against the pillows she'd piled behind her, her hair a dark blur against white cotton. Quietly, Lynley crossed to his wife and stood gazing down at her. She was light and shadow, perfectly omnipotent and achingly vulnerable. He sat on the edge of the bed. She didn't start as some might have done, roused suddenly from sleep by another's presence. Instead, her eyes opened and were immediately focussed on him with preternatural comprehension. "Frances finally went to him," she said as if they'd been talking all along. "Laura Hillier phoned with the news." "I'm glad," he said. "It's what she needed to do. How is he?" "There's no change. But he's holding on." Lynley sighed and nodded. "Anyway, it's over. We've made an arrest." "I know. Barbara phoned me as well. She said I should tell you all's right with the world at her end of things. She would have rung you on the mobile, but she wanted to check in with me." "That was good of her." "She's a very good person. She says Hillier's planning to give Winston a promotion, by the way. Did you know that, Tommy?" "Is he really?" "She says Hillier wanted to make sure she knew. Although, she says, he complimented her first. On the case. He complimented both of you." "Yes. Well, that sounds like Hillier. Never say "well done" without pulling the rug out just in case you're feeling cocky." "She'd like to be reinstated in her rank. But of course, you know that." "And I'd like the power to do that for her." He picked up the book she'd been reading. He turned it over and examined its title. A Lesson Before Dying. How apt, he thought. She said, "I found it among your novels in the library. I've not got far, I'm afraid. I dropped off to sleep. Lord. Why have I become so exhausted? If this goes on all nine months, by the end of the pregnancy I'll be sleeping twenty hours a day. And the rest of the time I'll spend being sick. It's supposed to be more romantic than this. At least, that's what I was always led to believe." "I've told Deborah." He explained why he'd gone to Chelsea in the first place, adding, "She already knew as things turned out." "Did she really?" "Yes. Well, obviously, she knows the signs. She's very pleased, Helen. You were right to want to share the news with her. She was only waiting for you to tell her." Helen searched his face then, perhaps hearing something in his tone that seemed misplaced, given the situation. And something was there. He could hear it himself. But what it was had nothing to do with Helen and even less to do with the future that Lynley intended to share with her. She said, "And you, Tommy? Are you pleased? Oh, you've said that you are but what else can you say? Husband, gentleman, and a party to the process, you can hardly go tearing from the room with your head in your hands. But I've had the feeling that something's gone badly wrong between us lately. I didn't have that feeling before we made the baby, so it's seemed to me that perhaps you aren't as ready as you thought you were." "No," he said. "Everything's right, Helen. And I am pleased. More than I can say." "I suppose we could have done with a longer period of adjustment together all the same," she said. Lynley thought of what Deborah had said to him, about the source of happiness coming from what's given. "We have the rest of our lives to adjust," he told his wife. "If we don't seize the moment, the moment's gone." He set the novel on her bedside table, then. He bent and kissed her forehead. He said, "I love you, darling," and she pulled him down to her mouth and parted her lips against his. She murmured, "Talking of seizing the moment .. ." and she returned his kiss in a way, he realised, that connected them as they hadn't been connected since she'd first told him she was pregnant. He felt a stirring for her, then, that mixture of lust and love that always left him at once both weak and resolute, determined to be her master and at the same time completely within her power. He laid a trail of kisses down her neck to her shoulders, and he felt her shiver as he eased the straps of her nightgown gently down her arms. As he cupped her bare breasts and bent to them, her fingers went to his tie and unknotted it and began to work on the buttons of his shirt. He looked up at her then, suddenly tempered by concern. "What about the baby?" he asked. "Is it safe?" She smiled and drew him into her arms. "The baby, darling Tommy, will survive." Chapter Twenty-Nine Winston Nkata came out of the bathroom and found his mother seated beneath a standard lamp whose shade had been removed to give her better light in which to work. What she was working on was her tatting: she'd taken a class in this form of lace-making with a group of ladies from her church, and she was determined to perfect the art. Nkata didn't know why. When he'd asked her the reason she'd begun messing about with cotton reels, shuttles, and knots, she said, "Keeps my hands busy, Jewel. And just 'cause something's not done much any longer, doesn't make it worth chucking out." Nkata thought it actually had to do with his father. Benjamin Nkata snored so ferociously that it was impossible for anyone to sleep in a room with him unless they managed to drop off first and lie like the dead once they got there. If Alice Nkata was up past her usual retiring time of ten forty-five, it stood to reason that she was practising her lacework in lieu of suffocating her snorting and bellowing husband in sheer insomniac frustration. Nkata could tell that was the case tonight. The moment he stepped from the bathroom, he was greeted not only with the sight of his mother at her lace but also with the sound of his father at his dreams. It sounded as if bears were being baited inside his parents' bedroom. Alice Nkata looked up from her work, over the top of her half-moon glasses. She was wearing her ancient yellow chenille dressing gown, and her son frowned with displeasure when he saw this. He said, "Where's that one I got you for Mothering Sunday?" "Where's what one?" his mother asked. "You know what one. That new dressing gown." "Too nice to sit around in, Jewel," she said. And before he could protest that dressing gowns weren't intended to be saved just in case one was invited to tea with the Queen so why wasn't she using the one he'd paid two weeks' wages to buy her at Liberty's, she said, "Where you going this hour?" "Thought I'd go round to see what's up with the super," he told her. "Case got resolved th' inspector nabbed the bloke who made the hits -but the super's still out and.. He shrugged. "I don't know. Seemed like it's the right thing to do." "At this hour?" Alice Nkata asked, casting a look at the tiny Wedgwood clock on the table beside her, a gift presented by her son at Christmas. "Don't know of any hospital round here that likes having visitors in the middle of the night." "Not the middle of the night, Mum." "You know what I mean." "Can't sleep anyway. Too wired up. If I c'n give a hand to the family.. . Like I said, it seems the right thing to do." She eyed him. "Dressed nice enough to be going to his wedding," she noted acerbically. Or his funeral, for that matter, Nkata thought. But he didn't like even getting close to that idea with regard to Webberly, so he made himself think of something else: like the reasons he'd set his sights on Katja Wolff as the killer of Eugenie Davies as well as the driver who'd injured the superintendent so grievously, like what it actually meant that Katja Wolff was not guilty of either offence. He said, "Nice to show respect where respect's due, Mum. You brought up a boy knows what's called for." His mother said, "Hmph," but he could tell she was pleased. She said, "Mind how you go, then. You see any no-hair white boys in Army boots hanging 'bout on the corner, you give them a wide berth. You walk th' other way. I mean what I say." "Right, Mum." "No "Right, Mum" like I don't know what I'm talking about." "Don't worry," he said. "I know that you do." He kissed her on the top of the head and left the flat. He felt a twinge of guilt at having fibbed he hadn't done that since adolescence but he told himself it was all in a good cause. It was late; there would have been too much explaining to do; he needed to be on his way. Outside, the rain was making its usual mess of the estate where the Nkatas lived. Pools of water had collected along the outdoor passages between the flats, deposited on the unprotected uppermost level by the wind and seeping down to the other levels through cracks between the floor of the passages and the building itself that had long existed and not been repaired. The staircase was consequently slick and dangerous, also as usual, because the rubber treads on the individual steps had been worn away or sometimes had been cut away by kids with too much time on their hands and too little to do to fill it leaving bare the concrete. And down below at what passed for the garden, the grass and flower beds of ancient times were now an expanse of mud across which lager cans, take away food wrappers, disposable nappies and other assorted human detritus made an eloquent statement about the level of frustration and despair that people sank to when they believed or their experience taught them that their options were limited by the colour of their skin. Nkata had suggested to his parents more than once that they move house, indeed that he would help them move house. But they had refused his every offer. If people set about digging up their roots first chance they had, Alice Nkata explained to her son, the whole plant could die. Besides, by staying right where they were and by having one son who'd managed to escape what could indeed have ruined him forever, they were setting an example for everyone else. No need to think their own lives had limits when among them lived someone who showed them that it wasn't so. "Besides," Alice Nkata said, 'we got Brixton Station close. And Lough-borough Junction as well. That suits me fine, Jewel. Suits your dad as well." So they stayed, his parents. And he stayed with them. Living on his own was as yet too expensive and even if it weren't, he wanted to remain in his parents' flat. He afforded them a source of pride that they needed, and he himself needed to give that to them. His car was gleaming under a street lamp, washed clean by the rain. He climbed inside and belted himself in. The drive was a short one. A few twists and turns put him on the Brixton Road where he headed north, cruising in the direction of Kennington. He parked in front of the agricultural centre where he sat for a moment looking across the street through the sheets of rain that the wind was waving between his car and Yasmin Edwards' flat. He'd been propelled to Kennington in part by the knowledge that he'd done wrong. He'd told himself earlier he'd done this wrong for all the right reasons, and he believed that there was a lot of truth to the assurance. He was fairly certain that Inspector Lynley might have used the same ploys with Yasmin Edwards and her lover, and he was absolutely positive that Barbara Havers would have done the same or more. But of course, they'd have had intentions a good sight nobler than his own had been, and beneath their behaviour would not have run the strong current of an aggression that was inconsistent with their invasion into the women's lives. Nkata wasn't sure where the aggression came from or what it indicated about him as a police officer. He only knew that he felt it and that he needed to lose it before he could move with absolute comfort again. He shoved open the car door, carefully locked it behind him, and dashed across the street to the block of flats. The lift door was closed. He began to ring the buzzer for Yasmin Edwards' flat, but he stopped with his finger suspended above the appropriate button. Instead, he rang the flat beneath it and when a man's voice asked who it was, he gave his name, said he'd been phoned about some vandalism in the car park, and would Mr. he looked at the list of names quickly- Mr. Houghton be willing to look at some pictures to see if he recognised any faces among a group of youths arrested in the vicinity? Mr. Houghton agreed to do so and buzzed the lift open. Nkata rode to Yasmin Edwards' floor with a pang of guilt for the manner in which he'd gained access, but he told himself he'd stop below afterwards and apologise to Mr. Houghton for the ruse. Her curtains were shut, but a thread of light licked at the bottom of them and behind the door, the sound of television voices spoke. When he knocked, she wisely asked who it was and when he gave his name, he was forced to wait thirty eternal seconds while she made up her mind whether to admit him. When she had done, she merely opened the door six inches, enough for him to see her in her leggings and her oversized sweater. Red this was, the colour of poppies. She said nothing. She looked at him squarely, her face without the slightest expression, which reminded him inadvertently again of who she was and what she always would be. He said, "C'n I come in?" "Why?" "Talk." "About?" "Is she here?" "What d'you think?" He heard the door open on the floor beneath them, knew it was Mr. Houghton wondering what had happened to the cop who'd come to show him pictures. He said, "Raining. Cold and damp're getting inside. You let me in and I stay a minute. Five at the most. I swear." She said, "Dan's asleep. I don't want him waked. He's got school ' "Yeah. I'll keep my voice low." She took another moment to make up her mind, but at last she stepped back. She turned from the door and walked to where she'd been before he'd knocked, leaving him to open the door wider and then to close it quietly behind him. He saw that she was watching a film. In it, Peter Sellers began to walk across water. It was an illusion, of course, the stuff of make believe but suggestive of possibility, nonetheless. She took up the remote control but did not turn the television off. She merely muted the sound and continued to watch the picture. He got the message and did not blame her for it. He would be even less welcome when he'd said what he'd come to say. "We got the hit-and-run driver," he told her. "It wasn't.. . Not Katja Wolff. She had a square alibi, 's things turned out." "I know her alibi," Yasmin said. "Number Fifty-five." "Ah." He looked at the television, then at her. She sat straight-backed. She looked like a model. She had a model's fine body, and she would have been perfect wearing trendy clothes for pictures except for her face, the scar on her mouth that made her look fierce and used and angry. He said, "Following leads 's part of the job, Missus Edwards. She had a connection with who got hit, and I couldn't ignore that." "I 'xpect you did what you had to do." "You did 's well," he said to her. "That's what I came to say." "Sure I did," she said. "Grassing's always the thing to do, isn't it?" "She didn't give you a choice once she lied to me 'bout where she was when that woman was hit. You either went along for the ride and put yourself in danger 'long with your boy or you told the truth. If she wasn't here, then she was somewhere and f r all anyone knew about it, that somewhere could've been up in West Hampstead. You couldn't stand by that, keep your mug shut, and take another fall." "Yeah. Well, Katja wasn't up in West Hampstead, was she? And now we know where she was and why, we c'n both rest easy. I won't be getting into trouble with the cops, I won't be losing Dan into care, and you won't be tossing round in your bed nights, wond'ring how the hell you're goin' t' stick something onto Katja Wolff when she never thought once of doing it." Nkata found it hard to digest that Yasmin would still defend Katja, despite Katja's betrayal. But he made himself think before he replied, and he saw that there was sense in what the woman was doing. He was still the enemy in Yasmin Edwards' eyes. Not only was he a copper, which would always put them at odds with each other, he was also the person who'd forced her to see that she was living within a charade, one party to a relationship that existed only in lieu of another, one that was longer standing to Katja, more desired, and just out of reach. He said, "No. I wouldn't be tossing in bed 'cause of that." "Like I say," was her contemptuous reply. "What I mean," he said, 'is I'd still be tossing. But not over that." "Whatever," she said. She held the remote at the television again. "That all you come to say? That I did the right thing and be happy, madam, 'cause you're safe from being called an accessory to something someone never did?" "No," he said. "That's not all I come to say." "Yeah? Then what else?" He didn't really know. He wanted to tell her that he'd had to come because his motives in forcing her hand had been mixed from the first. But in saying that, he'd be stating the obvious and telling her what she already knew. And he was more than acutely aware that she'd long ago realised that the motives of every man who looked at her, spoke to her, asked something of her lithe and warm and decidedly alive would always be mixed. And he was also more than acutely aware that he didn't want to be counted among those other men. So he said, "Your boy's on my mind, Missus Edwards." "Then take him off your mind." "Can't," he said and when she would have made a retort, he went on with, "It's like this. He's got the look of a winner, you know, if he follows a course. But lots out there c'n get in his way." "You think I don't know it?" "Didn't say that," he said. "But whether you like me or hate me, I c'n be his friend. I'd like to do that." "Do what?" "Be somebody to your boy. He likes me. You c'n see that yourself. I take him out and about now and then, he gets a chance to mix it up with someone who's playing it straight. With a man who's playing it straight, Missus Edwards," he hastened to add. "A boy his age? He needs that pretty bad." "Why? You had it yourself, you saying?" "I had it, yeah. Like to pass it along." She snorted. "Save it for your own kids, man." "When I have them, sure. I'll pass it to them. In the meanwhile.. ." He sighed. "It's this: I like him, Missus Edwards. When I got the free time, I'd like to spend it with him." "Doing what?" "Don't know." "He doesn't need you." "Not saying he needs me," Nkata told her. "But he needs someone. A man. You c'n see it. And the way I'm thinking ' "I don't care what you're thinking." She pressed the button and the sound came on. She raised it a notch lest he miss the message. He looked in the direction of the bedrooms, wondering if the boy would wake up, would walk into the sitting room, would show by his smile of welcome that everything Winston Nkata was saying was true. But the increase in volume didn't penetrate the closed door, or if it did, to Daniel Edwards it was just another sound in the night. Nkata said, "You got my card still?" Yasmin didn't reply, her eyes fastened on the television screen. Nkata took out another and set it on the coffee table in front of her. "You ring me if you change your mind," he said. "Or you c'n page me. Any time. It's okay." She made no reply, so he left the flat. He closed the door quietly, gently, behind him. He was below in the car park, crossing its puddle-strewn expanse to reach the street, before he realised that he'd forgotten his promise to himself to stop at Mr. Houghton's flat, show his warrant card, and apologise for the ruse that had gained him admittance. He turned back to do so and looked up at the building. Yasmin Edwards, he saw, was standing at her window. She was watching him. And she was holding in her hands something he very much wanted to believe was the card he'd given her. Chapter Thirty Gideon walked. At first he'd run: up the leafy confines of Cornwall Gardens and across the wet, narrow strip of traffic that was Gloucester Road. He hurtled into Queen's Gate Gardens then up past the old hotels in the direction of the park. And then mindlessly he ducked to the right and dashed past the Royal College of Music. He hadn't actually known where he was till he'd veered up a little incline and burst out into the well-lit surroundings of the Royal Albert Hall, where an audience was just pouring out of the auditorium's circumference of doors. There, the irony of the location had hit him and he'd stopped running. Indeed, he'd stumbled to a complete halt, chest heaving, with the rain pelting him, and not even noticing that his jacket was hanging heavy with the damp upon his shoulders and his trousers were slapping wetly against his shins. Here was the greatest venue for public performance in the land: the most sought after showplace for anyone's talent. Here, Gideon Davies had first performed as a nine-year-old prodigy with his father and Raphael Robson in attendance, all three of them eager for the opportunity to establish the name Davies in the classical firmament. How appropriate was it, then, that his final flight from Braemar Mansions -from his father, from his father's words and what they did and did not mean should bring him to the very raison d'etre of everything that had happened: to Sonia, to Katja Wolff, to his mother, to all of them. And how even more appropriate was it that the very raison d'etre behind the other raison d'etre the audience did not even know that he was there. Across the street from the Albert Hall, Gideon watched the crowd raise their umbrellas to the weeping sky. Although he could see their lips moving, he did not hear their excited chatter, that all too familiar sound of ravenous culture vultures who were sated for the moment, the happy noise of just the sort of people whose approbation he'd sought. Instead what he heard were his father's words, like an incantation within his brain: For God's sake I did it I did it I did it Believe what I say I say I say She was alive when you left her you left her I held her down in the bath the bath I was the one who drowned her who drowned her. It wasn't you Gideon my son my son. Over and over the words repeated, but they called forth a vision that made a different claim. What he saw was his hands on his sister's small shoulders. What he felt was the water closing over his arms. And above the repetition of his father's declaration, what he heard was the cries of the woman and the man, then the sound of running, the blam of doors closing, and the other hoarse cries, then the wail of sirens and the guttural orders of rescue workers going about their business where rescue was futile. And everyone knew that save the workers themselves because they were trained to one job only: maintaining and resuscitating life in the face of anything that stood in life's way. But For God's sake I did it I did it I did it Believe what I say I say I say. Gideon struggled for the memory that would allow this belief, but what he came up with was the same image as before: his hands on her shoulders and added to that now the sight of her face, her mouth opening and closing and opening and closing and her head turning slowly back and forth. His father argued that this was a dream because She was alive when you left her when you left her. And even more importantly because I held her down in the bath in the bath. Yet the only person who might have confirmed that story was dead herself, Gideon thought. And what did that mean? What did that tell him? That she didn't know the truth herself, his father told him insistently as if he walked at Gideon's side in the wind and the rain. She didn't know because I never admitted it, not then when it counted, not when I saw another far easier way to resolve the situation. And when I finally told her She didn't believe you. She knew that I'd done it. And you killed her to keep her from telling me that. She dead, Dad. She's dead, she's dead. Yes. All right. Your mother is dead. But she's dead because of me, not because of you. She's dead because of what I'd led her to believe and what I'd forced her into accepting. Which was what, Dad? Whaft Gideon demanded. You know the answer, his father replied. I let her believe you'd killed your sister. I said Gideon was in here in here in the bathroom he was holding her down I pulled him off her but my God my God Eugenie she was gone. And she believed me. And that's why she agreed to the arrangement with Katja: because she thought she was saving you. From an investigation. From a juvenile trial. From reams of publicity. From a hideous burden that would weigh you down for the rest of your life. You were Gideon Davies, for the love of God. She wanted to keep you safe from scandal, and I used that, Gideon, to keep everyone safe. Except Katja Wolff. She agreed. For the money. So she thought that I Yes she thought. She thought, she thought. But she did not know. Any more than you know right now. You were not in the room. You were dragged away, and she was taken downstairs. Your mother went to phone for help. And that left me alone with your sister. Don't you see what that means? But I remember You remember what you remember because that's what happened: You held her down. But holding her down and keeping her down are not the same. And you know that, GM eon By God, you know it. But I remember You remember what you did as far as you did it. I did the rest. I stand guilty of all the crimes that were committed. I am the man, after all, who could not bear to have my own daughter Virginia in my life. No. It was Granddad. Granddad was simply the excuse I used. I dismissed her, Gideon. I pretended she was dead because I wanted her dead. Don't forget that. Never forget that. You know what it means. You know it, Gideon. But Mother .. . Mother was going to tell me Eugenie was going to perpetuate the lie. She was going to tell you what I'd let her believe was the truth for years. She was going to explain why she'd left us without a word of goodbye, why she'd taken every picture of your sister with her, why she'd stayed away for nearly twenty years .. . Yes. She was going to tell you what she thought was the truth that you drowned your sister and I refused to let that happen. So I killed her, Gideon. I murdered your mother. I did it for you. So now there's no one left who can tell me I am telling you. You can believe me and you must believe me. Am I not a man who killed the mother of his own children? Am I not a man who hit her in the street, who drove a car over her, who removed the picture she'd brought to town with her to sustain your guilt? Am I not a man who drove off quietly and felt nothing afterwards? Am I not a man who went happily home to his young lover and got on with his life? So am I not thus also a man who is fully capable of killing a sickly worthless cretin of a child, a burden to us all, a living illustration of my own failure? Am I not that man, Gideon? Am I not that man? The question echoed through the years. It forced upon Gideon a hundred memories. He saw them flicker, un spooling before him. Each asked the same question: Am I not that man? And he was. He was. Of course. He was. Richard Davies had always been that man. But an admission of that fact a final embracing of it did not produce one gram of absolution. So Gideon walked. His face was streaked with rain, and his hair was painted onto his skull. Rivulets ran like veins down his neck, but he felt nothing of the cold or the damp. The path he followed felt aimless to him but it was not so despite the fact that he barely recognised when Park Lane gave way to Oxford Street and when Orchard Street turned into Baker. From the morass of what he remembered, what he had been told, and what he had learned emerged a single point that he clung to at the last: Acceptance was the only option available because only acceptance allowed reparation finally to be made. And he was the one who had to make that reparation because he was the only one left who could do so. He could not bring his sister back to life, he could not save his mother from destruction, he could not give Katja Wolff back the twenty years she'd sacrificed in the service of his father's plans. But he could pay the debt of those twenty years and at least in that one way he could make amends for the unholy deal his father had struck with her. And there was indeed a way to pay her back that would also close the circle of everything else that had happened: from his mother's death to the loss of his music, from Sonia's death to the public exposure of everyone associated with Kensington Square. It was embodied in the long and elegant inner bouts, the perfect scrolls, and the lovely perpendicular f-holes crafted two hundred and fifty years ago by Bartolomeo Giuseppe Guarneri. He would sell the violin. Whatever price it fetched at auction, no matter how high and it would be astronomical, he would give that money to Katja Wolff. And in taking those two specific actions, he would in effect be making a statement of apology and sorrow that no other effort on his part would permit him to make. He would allow those two actions to serve to close the circle of crime, lies, guilt, and punishment. His life would not be the same thereafter, but it would be his own life at last. He wanted that. Gideon had no idea what the time was when he finally arrived in Chalcot Square. He was soaked to the skin and drained of energy from the long walk. But at last, secure in the knowledge of the plan he would follow, he felt possessed by a modicum of peace. Still, the last yards to his house seemed endless. When he finally arrived, he had to pull himself up the front steps by the handrail, and he sagged against the door and fumbled in his trouser pockets for his keys. He didn't have them. He frowned at this. He relived the day. He'd started out with the keys. He'd started out with the car. He'd driven to see Bertram Cresswell-White and after that he'd gone to his father's flat where Libby, he recalled. She'd done the driving. She'd been with him. He'd asked her to leave him all those hours ago and she had obliged. She'd taken his car on his own instructions. She would have the keys. He was turning to go down the stairs to her flat when the front door swung open, however. Libby cried out, "Gideon! What the helP. Couldn't you get a taxi? Why didn't you call me? I would've come .. . Hey, that cop rang, the one who was here the other day to talk to you, remember? I didn't pick up but he left a message for you to call him. Is everything .. . ? Geez, why didn't you call me?" She held the door wide as she was speaking, and she drew him inside and slammed it behind him. They headed for the stairs. Gideon said nothing. She continued as if he'd made a reply. "Here, Gid. Put your arm around me. There. Where've you been? Did you talk to your Dad? Is everything okay?" They climbed to the first floor. Gideon headed towards the music room. Libby guided him towards the kitchen instead. "You need tea," she said. "Or soup. Or something. Sit. Let me get it.. ." He obliged. She chatted on. Her voice was quick. Her colour was high. She said, "I figured I should wait up here since I had the keys. I could've waited in my own place, I guess. I did go down a while ago. But Rock called, and I made the mistake of answering because I thought it was you. God, he is so not who I thought he was when I hooked up with him. He actually wanted to come over. Let's talk things out, was how he put it. Unbelievable." Gideon heard her and did not hear her. At the kitchen table, he was restless and wet. Libby said, even more rapidly now as he stirred on his seat, "Rock wants us to get back together. Course, it's all totally dog in the hay stack stuff, or whatever you call it but he actually said "I'm good for you, Lib" if you can believe that. Like he never spent our whole frigging marriage screwing everything with the right body parts that he ran into. He said, "You know we're good for each other," and I said back, "Gid's good for me, Rocco. You are, like, so totally bad." And that's what I believe, you know. You're good for me, Gideon. And I'm good for you." She was moving about the kitchen. She'd settled on soup, evidently, because she rooted through the fridge, found a carton of tomato and basil, and produced it triumphantly, saying, "Not even past its sell-by date. I'll heat it in a flash." She rustled out a pan and dumped the soup inside it. She set it on the cooker and took a bowl from the cupboard. She continued to talk. "How I figured it is this. We could blow London off for a while. You need a rest. And I need a vacation. So we could travel. We could go over to Spain for some decent weather. Or we could go to Italy. We could go to California, even, and you could meet my family. I told them about you. They know I know you. I mean, I told them we live together and everything. I mean, well, sort of. Not I sort of told them but we sort of live .. . you know." She put the bowl on the table along with a spoon. She folded a paper napkin into a triangle. She said, "There," and reached for one of the straps of her dungarees, which was held together by a safety pin. She clutched at this as he looked at her. She used her thumb against it, opening and closing the pin spasmodically. This display of nerves wasn't like her. It gave Gideon pause. He studied her, puzzled. She said, "What?" He rose. "I need to change my clothes." She said, "I'll get them," and headed towards the music room and his bedroom which lay beyond it. "What d'you want? Levis? A sweater? You're right. You need to get out of those clothes." And as he moved, "I'll get them. I mean, wait. Gideon. We need to talk first. I mean, I need to explain .. ." She stopped. She swallowed, and he heard the sound of it from five feet away. It was the noise a fish makes when it flops on the deck of a boat, breathing its last. Gideon looked beyond her then and saw that the lights in the music room were off, which served to warn him although he could not have said what the warning was. He took in the fact that Libby was blocking his way to the room, though. He took a step towards it. Libby said quickly, "Here's what you've got to understand, Gideon. You are number one with me. And here's what I thought. I thought How can I help him how can I help us to really be a real us? Because it's not normal that we'd be together but not really be together, is it. And it would be totally good for both of us if we ... you know.. . it's what you need. It's what I need. Each other, being who we really are. And who we are is who we are. It's not what we do. And the only way I knew to make you, like, see that and understand it because talking myself blue in the face sure as hell wasn't doing it and you know that was to ' "Oh God. No." Gideon pushed past her, shoving her to one side with an inarticulate cry. He fumbled to the nearest lamp in the music room. He grabbed it. He switched it on. He saw. The Guarneri what was left of it lay next to the radiator. Its neck was fractured, its top was shattered, its sides were broken into pieces. Its bridge was snapped in half and its strings were wrapped round what remained of its tailpiece. The only part of the violin that wasn't destroyed was its perfect scroll, elegantly curving as if it still could bend forward to reach towards the player's fingers. Libby was speaking behind him. High and rapid. Gideon heard the words but not their meaning. "You'll thank me," she said. "Maybe not now. But you will. I swear it. I did it for you. And now that it's finally gone from your life, you can ' "Never," he said to himself. "Never." "Never what?" she said and as he approached the violin, as he knelt before it, as he touched the chin rest and felt the cool of it mix with the heat that was coming into his hands, "Gideon?" Her voice was insistent, ringing. "Listen to me. It's going to be okay. I know you're upset, but you've got to see it was the only way. You're free of it now. Free to be who you are, which is more than just a guy who plays the fiddle. You were always more than that guy, Gideon. And now you can know it, just like I do." The words beat against him but he registered only the sound of her voice. And past that sound was the roar of the future as it rushed upon him, rising like a tidal wave, black and profound. He was rendered powerless as it overcame him. He was caught within it and all he knew was reduced in that instant to a single thought: what he wanted and what he planned to do had been denied him. Again. Again. He cried out, "No!" And "No!" And "No!" He surged to his feet. He did not hear Libby cry out in turn as he leapt towards her. His weight fell against her, fell hard upon her. Both of them toppled to the floor. She screamed, "Gideon! Gideon! No! Stop!" But the words were nothing, less than sound and fury. His hands went for her shoulders as they'd done in the past. And he held her down. Acknowledgments I couldn't have completed a project of this size in the time I allowed myself without the contributions and assistance of various individuals both in the United States and in England. In England, I would like to express my appreciation to Louise Davis, Principal of Norland College, for allowing me to watch nannies in training and for giving me background information on the professional lives of child care givers; to Godfrey Carey, Q.C." Joanna Korner, Q.C." and Charlotte Bircher of the Inner Temple, all of whom were instrumental in assisting me in my understanding of British jurisprudence; to Sister Mary O'Gorman of the Convent of the Assumption in Kensington Square for giving me access to the convent and the chapel and for providing me with two decades of information about the square itself; to Chief Superintendent Paul Scotney of the Metropolitan Police (Belgravia Police Station) for assisting me with police procedures and for proving once again that the most forgiving audience among my readers exists within the ranks of the British police; to Chief Inspector Pip Lane who always and generously acts as liaison between the local police and me; to John Oliver and Maggie Newton of HM Prison Holloway for information about the penal system in England; to Swati Gamble for everything from bus schedules to the locations of hospitals with casualty wards; to Jo-Ann Goodwin of the Daily Mail for assistance with the laws that deal with press coverage of murder investigations and trials; to Sue Fletcher for generously lending me the services of the resourceful Swati Gamble; and to my agent Stephanie Cabot of William Morris Agency to whom no obstacle is too much of a challenge. In the United States, I'm deeply grateful to Amy Sims of the Orange County Philharmonic, who took the time to make certain I was able to write about the violin with a fair degree of accuracy; to Cynthia Faisst, who allowed me to sit in on some violin instruction; to Dr. Gordon Globus, who added to my understanding of psycho genic amnesia and therapeutic protocols; to Dr. Tom Ruben and Dr. Robert Greenburg, who weighed in with medical information whenever I needed it; and to my writing students, who listened to early sections of the novel and gave helpful feedback. I am particularly indebted to my wonderful assistant Dannielle Azoulay without whom I could not possibly have written the rough draft of this rather lengthy novel in ten months. Dannielle's assistance in every area from doing necessary research to running errands was absolutely crucial to my well-being and my sanity, and I extend to her my deepest thanks. Finally, I'm grateful, as always, to my longtime editor at Bantam Kate Miciak who always asked the best questions about the most convoluted turns of plot; to my literary agent in the U.S. Robert Gottlieb of Trident Media who represents me with energy and creativity; to my fellow writer Don McQuinn who gallantly stood on the receiving end of my doubts and fears; and to Tom McCabe who graciously stepped out of the way of the creative locomotive whenever it was necessary. Praise for Elizabeth George's previous best selling novel, IN PURSUIT OF THE PROPER SINNER: "A compelling mystery' The Times "An excellent drama of life and death in an enclosed society' Mail on Sunday "Ms George has proved herself a master of the English mystery.. . With each book, she has moved up in the ranks of a team headed by P.D. James and Ruth Rendell' New York Times "Elizabeth George reigns as queen of the mystery genre. The Lynley books constitute the smartest, most gratifyingly complex and impassioned mystery series now being published' Entertainment Express 'the best plotter in the mystery game, her elegant literate flow puts many ." Brits to shame' Time Out ~ '.. . a great storyteller' Frances Fyfield, Sunday Express EllZlETH SLIT OF ER SINNER Author photograph: Greg Figge Cover photograph Clifford Webb