‘I should imagine you have,’ said Sister Bridget, rather more tartly than she had intended.
Roz massaged her aching temples. ‘This ape tried to pull my hair out,’ she murmured. ‘I think that’s what’s done it.’ She pressed an experimental hand to the back of her head and winced. ‘There’s some codeine in my handbag. You couldn’t find them for me, could you? I think my head is about to explode.’ She giggled hysterically. ‘Olive must be sticking pins into me again.’
Tut-tutting with motherly concern, Sister Bridget administered three with a glass of water. ‘I’m sorry, my dear,’ she said severely, ‘but I’m really very shocked. I can’t forgive any man who treats a woman like a chattel and, harsh though it may sound, I find it almost as difficult to forgive the woman. Better to live without a man at all than to live with one who is only interested in the degradation of the spirit.’
Roz squinted through one half-closed eyelid, unable to take the glare of light from the window. How indignant the other woman looked, puffing her chest like a pouter pigeon. Hysteria nudged about her diaphragm again. ‘You’re very harsh all of a sudden. I doubt Olive saw it as degradation. Rather the reverse, I should think.’
‘I’m not talking about Olive, my dear, I’m talking about you. This ape you referred to. He isn’t worth it. Surely you can see that?’
Roz shook with helpless laughter. ‘I’m so sorry,’ she said at last. ‘You must think me incredibly rude. The trouble is I’ve been on an emotional rollercoaster for months.’ She dabbed at her eyes and blew her nose. ‘You must blame Olive for this. She’s been a godsend. She’s made me feel useful again.’
She saw the polite bewilderment on the other’s face and sighed inwardly. Really, she thought, it was so much easier to tell lies. They were one dimensional and uncomplicated. ‘I’m fine . . . Everything’s fine . . . I like waiting rooms . . . Rupert’s been very supportive over Alice . . . We went our separate ways amicably . . .’ It was the tangled web of truth, woven deep into the fragile stuff of character, that made life difficult. She wasn’t even sure now what was true and what wasn’t. Had she really hated Rupert that much? She couldn’t imagine where she had found the energy. All she could really remember was how stifling the last twelve months had been.
‘I’m completely infatuated,’ she went on wildly as if that explained anything, ‘but I’ve no idea if what I feel is genuine or just pie in the sky hoping.’ She shook her head. ‘I suppose one never really knows.’
‘Oh, my dear,’ said Sister Bridget, ‘do be careful. Infatuation is a very poor substitute for love. It withers as easily as it flourishes. Love – real love – takes time to grow, and how can it do that in an atmosphere of brutality?’
‘That’s hardly his fault. I could have run away, I suppose, but I’m glad I didn’t. I’m sure they’d have killed him if he’d been alone.’
Sister Bridget sighed. ‘We seem to be talking at cross purposes. Do I gather the ape is not the man you’re infatuated with?’
With streaming eyes, Roz wondered if there was any truth in the phrase to die laughing.
‘You’re very brave,’ said Sister Bridget. ‘I’d have assumed he was up to no good and run a mile.’
‘Perhaps he is. I’m a very poor judge of character, you know.’
Sister Bridget laughed to herself. ‘Well, it all sounds very exciting,’ she said with a twinge of envy, taking Roz’s dress from the tumble-drier and laying it on the ironing board. ‘The only man who ever showed any interest in me was a bank clerk who lived three doors away from my parents. He was skin and bone, poor chap, with an enormous Adam’s apple that crawled about his throat like a large pink beetle. I simply couldn’t bear him. The Church was far more attractive.’ She wet her finger and tapped it against the iron.
Roz, wrapped in an old flannelette nightie, smiled. ‘And is it still?’
‘Not always. But I wouldn’t be human if I didn’t have regrets.’
‘Have you ever been in love?’
‘Good Heavens, yes. More often than you have, I expect. Purely platonically, of course. I meet some very attractive fathers in my job.’
Roz chuckled. ‘What sort of fathers? The cassocked variety or the ones in trousers?’
Sister Bridget’s eyes danced wickedly. ‘All I will say, as long as you promise not to quote me, is that I’ve always found cassocks a little off-putting and, with all the divorces there are these days, I spend more time talking to single men than, frankly, is good for a nun.’
‘If things ever work out,’ said Roz wistfully, ‘and I have another daughter, I’ll put her in your school so fast you won’t know what hit you.’
‘I shall look forward to it.’
‘No. I don’t believe in miracles. I did once.’
‘I’ll pray for you,’ said Sister Bridget. ‘It’s time I had something to get my teeth into. I prayed for Olive and look what God sent me.’
‘Now you’re going to make me cry.’
She woke in the morning with brilliant sunlight bathing her face through a gap in Sister Bridget’s spare-room curtains. It was too bright to look at so she cuddled down into the warmth of the duvet and listened instead. Ripples of birdsong swelled in glorious chorus from tiny feathered throats in the garden, and somewhere a radio murmured the news, but too low for her to make out the words. The smell of grilled bacon drifted tantalizingly from the kitchen downstairs, urging her to get up. She tingled with half-remembered vitality and wondered why she had allowed herself to stumble for so long through the blind fog of her depression. Life, she thought, was fabulous and the desire to live it too insistent to be ignored.
She waved goodbye to Sister Bridget, pointed the car towards the Poacher and switched on her stereo, feeding in Pavarotti. It was a very deliberate laying of a ghost. The rich voice surged in the speakers and she listened to it without regret.
The restaurant was deserted, no answer front or back to her knocking. She drove to the payphone she had used the night before and dialled the number, letting it ring for a long time in case Hal was asleep. When he didn’t reply, she replaced the receiver and returned to her car. She wasn’t concerned – frankly, Hal could look after himself rather better than any other man she had known – and she had more urgent fish to fry. From the dashboard pocket she took an expensive automatic camera with a powerful zoom lens – a legacy of the divorce – and checked it for film. Then, switching on the ignition, she drew out into the traffic.
She had to wait two hours, crouched uncomfortably on the back seat of her car, but she was well rewarded for her patience. When Olive’s Svengali finally emerged from his front door he paused for a second or two and presented her with a perfect shot of his face. Magnified by the zoom lens, the dark eyes bored straight through her as she took the picture before they turned away to glance down between the avenue of trees to check for oncoming traffic. She felt the hairs pricking on the back of her neck. He couldn’t possibly have seen her – the car was facing away from him with the camera lens propped on her handbag in the back window – but she shivered none the less. The photographs of Gwen and Amber’s mutilated bodies, lying on the seat beside her, were a terrible reminder that she was stalking a psychopath.
She arrived back at her flat, hot and tired from the sweltering heat of unheralded summer. The wintry feel of three days before had melted into brilliant blue skies with a promise of more heat to come. She opened the windows of the flat and let in the roar of London traffic. More noticeable than usual, it made her think with a brief wistfulness of the peace and beauty of Bayview.
She checked her answerphone for messages while she poured a glass of water, only to find the tape as she had left it, blank. She dialled the Poacher and listened, this time with mounting anxiety, to the vain ringing at the other end. Where on earth was he? She chewed the knuckle of her thumb in frustration then phoned Iris.
‘How would Gerry react if you asked him nicely to put on his solicitor’s hat’ – Gerald Fielding was a part
ner in a top London legal practice – ‘ring Dawlington police station and make some discreet enquiries before everything winds down for the weekend?’
Iris was never one to beat about the bush. ‘Why?’ she demanded. ‘And what’s in it for me?’
‘My peace of mind. I’m too twitched at the moment to write anything.’
‘Hmm. Why?’
‘I’m worried about my shady policeman.’
‘Your shady policeman?’ asked Iris suspiciously.
‘That’s right.’
Iris heard the amusement in her friend’s voice. ‘Oh, my God,’ she said crossly, ‘you haven’t gone and fallen for him? He’s supposed to be a source.’
‘He is – of endless erotic fantasy.’
Iris groaned. ‘How can you write objectively about corrupt policemen if you’ve got the hots for one of them?’
‘Who says he’s corrupt?’
‘He must be, if Olive’s innocent. I thought you said he took her confession.’
‘It’s a pity you’re not a Catholic. You could go to confession and feel better immediately . . .’
‘Are you still there?’ demanded Iris.
‘Yes. Will Gerry do it?’
‘Why can’t you make the call yourself?’
‘Because I’m involved and they might recognize my voice. I made them a 999 call.’
Iris groaned again. ‘What on earth have you been up to?’
‘Nothing criminal, at least I don’t think so.’ She heard the grunt of horror at the other end. ‘Look, all Gerry has to do is ask a few innocent questions.’
‘Will he have to lie?’
‘A white lie or two.’
‘He’ll have a fit. You know Gerry. Breaks out in a muck sweat at the mere mention of falsehoods.’ She sighed loudly. ‘What a pest you are. You realize I shall have to bribe him with promises of good behaviour. My life won’t be worth living.’
‘You’re an angel. Now, these are the only details Gerry needs to know. He’s trying to contact his client, Hal Hawksley of the Poacher, Wenceslas Street, Dawlington. He has reason to believe the Poacher has been broken into and wonders if the police know where Hal can be contacted. OK?’
‘No, it’s not OK, but I’ll see what I can do. Will you be in this evening?’
‘Yes, twiddling my thumbs.’
‘Well, try twiddling them round your keyboard,’ said Iris acidly. ‘I’m fed up with being the only one who does any meaningful work in this lopsided relationship of ours.’
She had had the film developed at a one-hour booth in her local High Street while she did some shopping. Now she spread the prints over her coffee table and studied them. She put the ones of Svengali, the two close-ups of his face and some full-length shots of his back as he walked away, to one side and smiled at the rest. She had forgotten taking them. Deliberately, she thought. They were of Rupert and Alice playing in the garden on Alice’s birthday, a week before the accident. They had declared a truce that day, she remembered, for Alice’s sake. And they had kept it, up to a point, although as usual the responsibility for refusing to be drawn had been Roz’s. As long as she could keep her cool and smile while Rupert let slip his poisoned darts about Jessica, Jessica’s flat, and Jessica’s job, everything was hunky-dory. Alice’s joy in having her parents back together again shone from the photographs.
Roz pushed them tenderly to one side and rummaged through her carrier bag of shopping, removing some cellophane, a paintbrush, and three tubes of acrylic paint. Then, munching into a pork pie, she set to work.
Every now and then she paused to smile at her daughter. She should have had the film developed before, she told Mrs Antrobus, who had curled contentedly into her lap. The rag doll of the newspapers had never been Alice. This was Alice.
‘He’s legged it,’ said Iris baldly down the wire two hours later, ‘and Gerry has been threatened with all sorts of nasties if he doesn’t reveal his client’s whereabouts the minute he knows them. There’s a warrant out for the wretched man’s arrest. Where on earth do you find these ghastly creatures? You should take up with a nice one, like Gerry,’ she said severely, ‘who wouldn’t dream of beating up women or involving them in criminal activities.’
‘I know,’ agreed Roz mildly, ‘but the nice ones are already taken. Did they mention what the charge is against Hal?’
‘Charges, more like. Arson, resisting arrest, GBH, absconding from the scene of a crime. You name it, he’s done it. If he gets in touch with you, don’t bother to let me know. Gerry’s already behaving like the man who knew the identity of Jack the Ripper but kept it quiet. He’ll have a heart attack if he thinks I know where he is.’
‘Mum’s the word,’ Roz promised.
There was a moment’s silence. ‘You might do better to hang up if he calls. There’s a man in hospital with appalling facial burns, apparently, a policeman with a dislocated jaw, and when they arrived to arrest him he was trying to set fire to his restaurant. He sounds horribly dangerous to me.’
‘I think you’re probably right,’ said Roz slowly, wondering what on earth had happened after she left. ‘He’s got a lovely arse, too. Aren’t I the lucky one?’
‘Cow!’
Roz laughed. ‘Thank Gerry for me. I appreciate his niceness even if you don’t.’
She went to sleep on the sofa in case she missed the phone when it rang. It occurred to her that he might not want to trust himself to an answer machine.
But the telephone remained stubbornly silent all weekend.
Sixteen
ON MONDAY MORNING, with the black dog of depression on her shoulder again, Roz went to the Belvedere Hotel and placed the photograph on the desk. ‘Is this Mr Lewis?’ she asked the proprietress.
The amiable woman popped on her glasses and took a good look. She shook her head apologetically. ‘No, dear, I’m sorry. He doesn’t ring a bell at all.’
‘Try now.’ She smoothed the cellophane across the photograph.
‘Good heavens. How extraordinary. Yes, that’s Mr Lewis all right.’
Marnie agreed. ‘That’s him. Dirty bugger.’ She screwed up her eyes. ‘It doesn’t flatter him, does it? What would a young girl see in that?’
‘I don’t know. Uncritical affection perhaps.’
‘Who is he?’
‘A psychopath,’ said Roz.
The other whistled. ‘You want to be careful then.’
‘Yes.’
Marnie tapped her carmined nails on the desk. ‘Sure you don’t want to tell me who he is in case you end up in bits on your kitchen floor?’ She flicked Roz a speculative glance. There might, she thought, be some money in this somewhere.
Roz caught the glint in the other’s eye. ‘No thanks,’ she said shortly. ‘This is one piece of information I intend to keep to myself. I don’t fancy my chances if he learns I’m close.’
‘I won’t blab,’ said Marnie with a pout of injured innocence.
‘You can’t if I don’t put temptation your way.’ Roz tucked the photograph into her handbag. ‘It would be irresponsible, anyway. You’re a prime witness. He could just as easily come after you and chop you into little pieces.’ She smiled coldly. ‘I should hate to have that on my conscience.’
Roz returned to her car and sat for some minutes staring out of the window. If ever she had needed a tame ex-policeman to guide her through the maze of legal procedure, she thought, it was now. She was an amateur who could all too easily make mistakes and muck up the chances of a future prosecution. And where would that leave Olive? Languishing in prison, presumably. The verdict against her could only be overturned rapidly if someone else was convicted. On its own the seed of reasonable doubt would take years of germination before the Home Office would feel pressured enough to take notice. How long had the Birmingham Six had to wait for justice? The responsibility to get it right was frightening.
But, loath though she was to admit it, what weighed rather more heavily with her was the knowledge that she hadn’t the courage
to write the book while Olive’s psychopathic lover remained at liberty. Try as she might, she could not get the pictures of Gwen and Amber out of her mind.
She slammed her fists against the steering-wheel. Where are you, Hawksley? You bastard! I was always there for you.
Graham Deedes, Olive’s one-time barrister, walked into his chambers after a long day in court and frowned in irritation to find Roz parked on a seat outside his door. He looked pointedly at his watch. ‘I’m in a hurry, Miss Leigh.’
She sighed, unfolding herself from the hard chair. ‘Five minutes,’ she begged. ‘I’ve been waiting two hours.’
‘No, I’m sorry. We have people coming to dinner and I promised my wife I wouldn’t be late.’ He opened his door and went inside. ‘Ring and make an appointment. I’m in court for the next three days but I may be able to fit you in towards the end of the week.’ He prepared to shut her out.
She stood up and leaned her shoulder on the door jamb, holding the door open with one hand. ‘Olive did have a lover,’ she told him. ‘I know who he is and I’ve had his photograph identified by two witnesses, one of whom is the owner of the hotel that he and Olive used throughout the summer before the murders. I have a witness who bears out Olive’s claim to have had an abortion. The date she gave me implies that Olive’s baby, had it lived, would have been born around the time of the murders. I have learned that two people, Robert Martin and the father of a friend of Olive’s, quite independently of each other, told the police that Olive was incapable of murdering her sister. The scenario they both offered was that Gwen killed Amber – she didn’t like Amber, apparently – and Olive killed Gwen. I admit the forensic evidence doesn’t support that case but it proves that serious doubts existed even at the time which I don’t think were brought to your attention.’ She saw the impatience in his face and hurried on. ‘For all sorts of reasons, principally because it was her birthday, I do not believe that Olive was in the house on the night before the murders and I do believe that Gwen and Amber were killed much earlier than the time Olive claims to have done it. I think Olive returned home some time during the morning or afternoon of the ninth, found the carnage in the kitchen, knew her lover was responsible, and was so overcome with shock and remorse that she confessed to the crime herself. I think she was very unsure of herself, very distressed, and didn’t know how to cope when the main prop in her life, her mother, was so suddenly taken from her.’
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