“The police won’t release that information until family have been notified, ma’am,” Gemma answered, avoiding the second question, at least. There was no hope of stonewalling on the first—the human grapevine worked too well.
“I don’t know what this will do to my lunch business,” the woman said with a sigh. “The roadblock will keep the clientele away.”
“I’m sure your customers will find a way to get here. Curiosity will overcome a little minor inconvenience, believe me,” Gemma reassured her. “This will be gossip central, once the news gets round, and you might be prepared for some journalists, too.
“That’s true.” The woman brightened, then frowned again. “I wonder if I’ve enough laid in. I’d better start prep, then.” With a dis-
tracted nod at Gemma, she turned back to the pub, leaving Gemma with her still-scalding cup of coffee.
“Thanks,” Gemma called after her, belatedly. Turning back to the car, she saw that Kit had leaned back against the headrest, his eyes closed, his lips parted in the relaxation of unexpected sleep. He looked as young and defenseless as Toby, and her chest tightened with a fierce, possessive love. She would have done anything to protect him from this—Kit, the last person who needed another blow, another loss, in his short life.
She stood irresolute, not wanting to wake him by getting back into the car, sipping her coffee and gazing at the boats along the canal bank. Lined up nose to tail, they reminded her of a drawing of circus animals leading one another in a parade in one of Toby’s books.
She had seen narrowboats on the Grand Union Canal near the supermarket where she shopped at home, but had never been aboard one. Those had charmed her with their rooftop flowerpots and haphazardly strung laundry, their slightly shabby air of rakishness.
Most of the boats below, however, were buttoned up against the cold like sensible matrons, and looked rather forlornly abandoned.
But a spiral of smoke issued from the chimney of one of the more colorful crafts, and as she watched, a man came out of the cabin and looked round, briefly, before going back inside.
The sound of a car door slamming made Gemma turn, thinking that Kit had awakened, but to her surprise she saw the doctor climbing from her car once more. This time she held not her bag, but some sort of bulky equipment that on closer inspection Gemma thought was an oxygen tank.
The doctor crossed the bridge again, but rather than turning right, she went to the left, back towards the boats clustered across from the pub. She stopped beside the brightly colored narrowboat Gemma had noticed before and seemed about to call out, but before she could speak, the cabin door opened.
This time, Gemma caught a glimpse of a curly-headed child, then the doctor climbed awkwardly aboard and went inside. Since when, Gemma wondered, did pathologists make house calls?
A touch on her shoulder made her jump, but even as she drew breath to gasp, Kincaid said, “Sorry, love. I didn’t mean to give you a fright. You were miles away.”
Turning, she examined his face. His voice had been even, uninflected, but she detected a familiar undercurrent of tension. “Was it bad?” she asked, nodding in the direction of the crime scene.
“Mmmm.” He made a noise of assent in his throat. “No sign of sexual interference, though, thank God. At least Kit was spared that. And not much blood, other than beneath the head. But . . .”
He stopped, jamming his hands in his coat hard enough to tear holes in his pockets, not meeting her eyes. “But I can’t imagine, when he saw her lying there, that he didn’t think of his mum. How is he?”
Gemma looked back towards the car. Kit’s head had tilted to one side as he’d fallen into a deeper sleep, and Tess had moved to the driver’s seat. “He’s exhausted,” she said. “As much from trying to hold himself together as anything else, I think. We need to get him home.”
“Home.” Kincaid repeated the word under his breath, frowning, as if making sense of a foreign language, and gazed abstractedly at the canal.
“What—” Gemma had begun, when he turned to her and gripped her shoulders with almost painful force.
“Right,” he said. “You’re absolutely right. As soon as Babcock gets Kit’s statement, we’ll pack up and head back to London. There’s no reason we should stay here, no reason Kit should be involved in this any further. We can go home.”
Gemma stared at him, galvanized by the thought. In just a few hours, they could be back in the safe haven of their house in Notting Hill, removed from thoughts of disintegrating marriages and dead
babies, away from the horror of a violent death that encroached on their personal lives.
After all, Duncan and Kit had met the woman only briefly—
surely they had no obligation to do more than was legally necessary.
And Rosemary and Hugh would understand; they would know that Kit was the last child who should be subjected to such stress.
Glancing towards the car, she saw Kit turn restlessly in his sleep, his lips moving, but the intervening glass muffled any sound. She recalled the things he had said to her in the car, and slowly, reluctantly, shook her head.
“No,” she said. “I don’t think we can. I think we have to see this through. I think we have to let Kit see this through.”
“But—”
“It’s all mixed up in his mind,” Gemma continued, certain that she was right. “This woman’s death and his mother’s. He feels responsible, as if he somehow failed them both. And if we take him away, he’ll just carry that burden with him, wherever he goes. We can’t let that happen.”
Chapter Seventeen
Althea Elsworthy stowed her medical bag in the boot, then climbed gratefully into the relative warmth of the car. Danny, who had sat up at her approach, rested his chin on the seat back and looked at her expectantly. Usually, when she returned to the car, she gave him a biscuit from the large plastic tub she kept on the floor in the front. Of course, he was quite capable of chewing through the container and helping himself, but he was an obedient dog and had never taken advantage of her absence.
“You’re a good boy,” she said, as she always did, and popped open the tub. Danny took the proferred biscuit delicately, but as he crunched the treat he scattered crumbs and spittle on the towel she kept draped over the seat back for just that purpose.
Ritual satisfied, he settled down again on the seat with his head on his paws, watching her with an eternal canine optimism she wished she shared.
While he trusted that she knew what to do next, she was struggling to understand the action she’d just taken—or perhaps it would be more accurate to say “not taken.”
Why had she remained silent? An easy enough explanation was
that the first sight of Annie Lebow’s body had left her simply too stunned to speak. Her lack of intimation seemed odd now. There had been no frisson of foreknowledge when the call came asking her to attend the body of a woman found dead on the towpath below Barbridge. Most likely a jogger struck down by a heart attack, she’d thought, and had merely been thankful that the location of the body would make it easy for her to call in on the Wains. Not even the sight of the boat had cued her.
But her job required a memory for physical detail, and the fl eece top had provided the first jolt of recognition. Then the leather boating shoes, one separated from the foot and lying on its side, as if it had been casually kicked free. After that, the sight of the fair hair, now matted, and the strong jaw, half hidden by the raised forearm, had merely served as confirmation.
Beyond that point, her failure to admit she knew the victim became harder to justify. If Ronnie Babcock hadn’t been below decks, perhaps she would have spoken to him then, when she’d got her breath back from the first shock. But there had only been his green detective constable, hovering, so she’d waited, trying to concentrate on the task at hand, trying to distance herself from the vision of Annie Lebow’s animated face seen just the previous day.
And then, when Babcock had climbed up from the depths
of the boat, with him had been a tall, sharp-eyed man whom Babcock had introduced as a Scotland Yard superintendent. No explanation had been given as to why, or how so quickly, the Yard had been called to the scene of a rural suspicious death, but Althea had felt her heart give an unexpected lurch.
She’d realized that if she admitted her recent connection with Annie, she’d have to explain about the Wains.
But now that she’d had a few moments to think, doubt assailed her. Was it just coincidence that Annie Lebow had encountered a family she hadn’t seen since she’d left Social Services, then been killed? Could Gabriel Wain have had something to do with Annie’s s
death? And if so, why? Gabriel might have accepted Annie’s help grudgingly, but Althea couldn’t imagine that he would have harmed her.
With sudden impatience, she thrust her uncertainties aside. She had promised to help Rowan Wain, and now it seemed more important than ever that she keep her word. No matter that she’d have to wade through the local constabulary in order to visit the boat—if anyone inquired, she’d simply tell the truth. She was visiting a patient.
Still, she looked round before getting out of the car, and it was only when the officer watching over the bridge had gone to consult with one of his mates farther up the lane that she retrieved the oxygen tank from the boot and started for the boat. There was no point in complicating matters unnecessarily, she told herself briskly, but she couldn’t shake the unsettling feeling that she was being watched.
Although Kincaid usually disliked being driven by someone he didn’t know well, he made an effort to relax into the padded leather passenger seat of Ronnie Babcock’s BMW. He told himself he should appreciate the chance to concentrate on the landscape and clear his mind for the interview to come.
In the end, it had been Gemma who’d insisted he go with Babcock to see Roger Constantine. Listening in on Babcock’s interview with Kit had been enough to convince him that Gemma was right—
they couldn’t just walk away from this and pretend nothing had happened. And if that was the case, she’d argued, it made sense for him to make use of his connection with Babcock, especially as Babcock seemed willing to accommodate him. He’d just have to be careful to maintain his role as spectator, as he suspected Babcock would draw the line at active interference in his investigation.
“You said this fellow Constantine was a journalist?” he asked Babcock. “I wonder at our odds of catching him at home.”
Babcock narrowed his eyes in an effort of recall. “I think I remember Annie saying he was a features writer for one of the major northwest papers. Of course, we could have tried contacting him by phone first, but I’d prefer to break bad news in person if at all possible.” It sounded compassionate, but Kincaid knew there was calculation attached—it always paid to see the first reactions of those closest to the victim.
“Then we’ll hope he works from home, or that journalists take a long Christmas holiday.” Kincaid resisted the urge to pump an imaginary brake as Babcock slowed sharply for a slow- moving farm lorry.
When the way was clear, Babcock downshifted and zipped round it with ease. The road had begun to twist and turn, making an ideal showcase for the BMW’s power and maneuverability.
The character of the countryside changed rapidly as one traveled west from Nantwich. Within just a few miles, the land rose from the flat of the Cheshire Plain into gently wooded undulations, and the simple brick farmhouses began to sport brightly colored gingerbread trim. Kincaid had never learned what had inspired the architectural embellishments, but when he was a boy, the decoration had made him think of cottages in enchanted Germanic forests. The childhood that had allowed such imaginings now seemed impossibly distant, and the loss of his son’s opportunity for such innocence struck him as forcibly as a blow.
Ronnie Babcock took his eyes from the road to glance at Kincaid. “I know what you’re thinking.”
“Sorry?” Kincaid responded.
Babcock said, “You’re remembering the Ford Anglia I had at school.”
Relieved, Kincaid said lightly, “Of course. But I never had the dubious pleasure of riding in it.” He recalled the car well, though, a Saloon special with Venetian-gold paintwork, held together with considerable assistance from baling wire. Ronnie had worked several after-school jobs to save the money for it, and the car had been his pride and joy.
“A good thing, too,” Babcock agreed. “I had a passenger or two fall out through the floorboards. I was thinking of building a roof ejector when the old girl finally clapped out on me.”
“You’ve done well for yourself, Ronnie.” Kincaid’s gesture took in the BMW, but he meant more than that.
Babcock gave a sardonic smile. “I suppose I have. Just look at me now—overworked, with an overly mortgaged unheated house, and no one but an elderly aunt for company. Just what any working-class lad should strive for.”
“You’re not married, then?”
“Divorced. Just this last year.” Babcock’s grimace was worth a thousand words. “What about you? Why haven’t you and the lovely Gemma tied the knot?”
Taken aback, Kincaid glanced at his friend, but Babcock’s eyes were on the road.
“It’s complicated,” he said slowly. “In the beginning, we were working together, so I suppose we got in the habit of being secretive.
You know how it is. It would have been all right for me if it had come out, just a bit of nudge, nudge, wink, wink from the worst tossers in the locker room, that sort of thing. But for Gemma, it would have meant a permanent shadow on her career. There would always have been whispers that she’d slept her way into promotions, no matter how capable she proved herself.” Even now, the unfairness of it made his blood pressure rise, and he shook his head in disgust before going on. “So when she made inspector and transferred to another posting, we more or less kept on as we were. But then . . .”
Kincaid hesitated.
“Then we found out that Gemma was pregnant. We moved in together, but I—I think neither of us wanted to feel that—”
“Marriage was a necessity of circumstance?” Babcock finished for him when he halted again. “That would have been a blow to your pride.”
Kincaid nodded, feeling his face flush at the accuracy of the hit.
“Just so. It seems unutterably selfish now.”
Frowning, Babcock said, “But it’s been some time, hasn’t it? I met your younger boy, when I came to the house.”
“Oh, no,” Kincaid hastened to explain. “Toby is Gemma’s son, from her first marriage. We—Gemma lost our baby, halfway to term.
That was a year ago.”
“Oh, Jesus.” Babcock looked at him, his battered face creased in sympathy. “That’s a bloody shame.”
Not trusting himself to accept the commiseration, Kincaid went on, “Since then, we’ve just sort of muddled along, the four of us living as a family. Not unhappily,” he amended, afraid his words had implied that. “It’s just that—I don’t know if she’d have chosen differently, you see, if it hadn’t been for the child.” Kincaid realized it was the first time he’d admitted his fear, even to himself, and he felt suddenly as exposed as if he’d laid bare his chest to the knife.
“You could ask her,” Babcock suggested, as if it were the most reasonable response imaginable.
“Christ, no.” Kincaid shook his head. “I’d be forcing her into a corner then, and if she told me what I wanted to hear, I’d never be sure if she was being honest or just kind.” He thought of her refusal to discuss trying for another child, and felt cold.
He searched for a change of subject, glad that Babcock was momentarily distracted as he downshifted and left the A for a B road signposted no man’s heath. “That sounds a desolate place,” Kincaid offered, a little too quickly.
“A bit Shakespearean,” Babcock agreed. “But there’s a nice pub there, as it happens. That’s why I came this way, I suppose. Old habits.” With that ambiguous and uninviting comment, he fell silent, leaving Kincaid
to gaze at the scenery and wonder about his friend’s reticence.
They were nearing the Welsh border, and he could see that it had
snowed more heavily here. Snow still lingered on the eaves of the isolated farmhouses, and as they passed through the pretty redbrick hill town of Malpas, the anti- icing grit crunched under the BMW’s tires.
A few miles farther north, the tree- lined lane dipped and curved into the hamlet of Tilston. Although they slowed to a crawl, reading the address plaques on the cottages and suburban bungalows lining the road, they still missed Roger Constantine’s house the first time past. The steep entrance to its drive faced away from them, so that they only saw the address when they had turned around at the postage stamp of a village green and come back from the opposite direction.
In a village of cottages and suburban bungalows, the Victorian lodge stood on a high bank above the road, screened from below by the large trees and shrubs of a mature garden.
“Blimey,” Babcock said eloquently as they bumped up the narrow gravel drive and pulled to a stop on the forecourt. “Nice digs for a journalist, wouldn’t you say?”
Kincaid had to agree. The house’s brick facade was a mellow rose rather than the harsh burnt red used often in Cheshire and North Wales, and the gleaming white trim looked freshly painted.
“Maybe he’s sold a few exclusives to the Sun, ” Kincaid quipped.
“My ex-wife would have killed for this,” Babcock muttered as they climbed from the car and crossed the raked gravel of the drive.
Kincaid merely nodded. He felt the weight of the coming interview descend on him—he had never learned to bear bad tidings easily. He took a preparatory breath, but before they reached the porch, the front door opened and a large German shepherd charged out at them. Kincaid’s life flashed before his eyes in the instant it took him to see that the dog was firmly attached to a lead held by a slight man with trimmed white hair and beard.
“Can I help you?” the man asked, reining the dog in with an admonishing “Jazz, easy.”
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