Authors: Jane A. Adams
âSo what happened between early Saturday morning and the Sunday?' Naomi asked.
âDid they spend that night together?' Harry asked.
âWell, yes, sort of. Jamie apparently went back to Dan's place. When he woke up late Saturday morning she'd gone. He didn't think anything of it, then when he tried to call her later that day her phone was off. He tried her home phone, but no joy there either. He went round that night, let himself in, but no Jamie. Then she called him the next morning and just said she didn't want to see him again.'
Their meals arrived, and conversation paused.
âSo what happened after that?' Alec wanted to know.
âShe broke contact with just about everyone. Stopped seeing friends, stopped calling, stopped taking calls.' He hesitated, and then said, âI think at first we all made it easy for her. You know how people try not to take sides with mutual friends but inevitably do? Well, I think a lot of us were shocked and took Dan's part. The rest of us just thought we'd wait her out, see if they could reconcile or if she started to make contact again. I think we took the easy option. I'm afraid that's what happened.'
âAnd you?'
âLeft for the Middle East the week after the split, came back five months later and Jamie was no longer part of the scene. Dan said he'd gone to the flat,
her
flat, tried to let himself in, but she'd changed the locks. He kept trying to call her, but she changed her phone, only gave her number to people who absolutely had to have it. Then when he kept on trying to make contact she threatened to get an injunction. So he stopped. That was that.'
Naomi thought about it, trying to make sense of the sequence. Jamie had kept in sporadic contact with herself and Alec, had even called when they sent the wedding invitation. Had she sounded like her old selfâ? No, Naomi decided, she'd said she was tired and in the middle of projects that were taking all her time and energy, and Naomi had assumed this was why she hadn't been her bubbly self. The card and photo frame had arrived and, Naomi realized, she had given Jamie little further thought.
â
You
stayed in touch though,' she said.
âNot at first,' Matthew admitted. âI was home in London for a couple of weeks and then back in the field. It was the best part of ten, eleven months before I actually saw Jamie again, and that was only because I bumped into her one day. She'd been in to see one of the commissioning editors, and we ran into one another in the lobby. We chatted, had coffee, and I made a point of keeping in touch.'
âHow did she seem?'
âQuieter,' he said, so quickly that Naomi realized he'd given this a lot of thought. âOlder. Sadder, somehow.'
âDid she say anything? I mean, about what happened.'
âNaomi, I soon learnt to keep the conversation neutral. I could discuss work or the weather, even what was in the news, but the moment the conversation even looked like turning personal it was like I'd pressed the off switch. I heard she was having trouble getting work, and I did what I could to help, but she wasn't the same. She was as efficient as ever, sometimes, then she'd suddenly not turn up for work or she'd be so snippy with everyone that the atmosphere was terrible. I'm afraid to say I'd reached the point where â well, we had an almighty row. Later, I heard about the crash and that she was dead.'
Silence for a few beats. Munroe broke it this time. âWhat did you fight about?'
Matthew laughed bitterly. âHer behaviour towards the rest of the crew. She was constantly picking fault, utterly impatient, and yet she didn't seem to know what she
did
want. We'd been editing a sequence, some filming we'd done in Manchester, picking up threads from the earlier documentaries. It was going well, but suddenly Jamie was ranting, and I mean out of control ranting, just because someone put sugar in her tea. So, later on that day, I gave her an ultimatum. She either told me what was eating her, or she was finished so far as I was concerned. I couldn't go on covering up for her, smoothing things overâ'
âAnd how long before the crash was that?'
âIt was the day before. The next day she didn't turn up for work. I think we all breathed a secret sigh of relief and got on with editing the Manchester sequences. I got home that night and watched the news. She was dead.'
TWENTY-TWO
T
hey left the Black Horse just after six with the intention of going to the house to collect clothes for Alec, check the post and pick up a few bits and pieces that Naomi wanted. Harry took Naomi and Alec, while Munroe followed on behind. Harry and Naomi would then go back Harry's, and Alec would return to the investigation with Munroe.
Matthew had, inevitably, asked them about that. Were they involved in the investigation, did they know anything? He probed for a while, but Munroe deflected him and Alec just watched with some amusement. By the time they left, Matthew Broughton knew no more than he had a couple of hours before. Alec found himself wondering if any of them did.
It was a bright, clear evening, though a slight chill to the stiffening breeze suggested that rain might be on the way. No one said much, the events of the afternoon had been unsettling and sad and an air of melancholy had descended that seemed resistant to conversation.
It was the first time Naomi had returned home since she had come with Harry, and she did not feel exactly comfortable doing so now. Megan had said she'd been getting a patrol car to do the odd extra run, but as Naomi wasn't there, focus had shifted to Harry's place back in the town.
âI'll wait in the car unless you need me,' Harry said.
âJust as you like,' Alec told him.
Munroe got out of his car and leaned against the wing. He looked as though he was enjoying the evening air, eyes half closed and his jacket off. Alec led the way inside.
They halted in the doorway, knowing at once that something was wrong.
âWhat is that smell?'
âYou didn't leave anything out of the fridge?' Alec suggested.
âAlec, that isn't something left out of the fridge.'
âNo, you're right, it's not. I think you should wait outside. Or wait here.'
âAlec!'
âOK.' He took her hand, and together they walked cautiously down the hall and into the kitchen. The kitchen door stood wide. The smell was overpowering now. Dead thing. Very dead thing. The buzzing of flies astonishingly loud in the enclosed space. Alec let go of Naomi's hand and moved to where he could see.
âWhat is it?' Naomi demanded. Then, suddenly understanding, âWho is it?'
âI don't know.' Whoever it had once been, their face was now a bloody pulp. Something, Alec guessed close to a week's worth of decomposition, had done the rest. It could have been someone he knew and he'd not have recognized them. âWe should go.'
He led Naomi back out of the house and called to Munroe. Harry, realizing something was wrong, got out of his car. The smell was now following them though the house and outside, or was it just, Naomi wondered, that it had attacked the inside of her nose and fixed itself there?
âWe were here only four days ago!' she said.
âHe's been dead longer than four days. Harry, go home, please, I'll come to you there. Pack a bag and get ready to leave. Get Patrick and Mari to do the same. Munroe, get on to Eddison and tell him to get his backside over here.'
âWho are you calling?' Munroe wanted to know.
âPeople I can trust,' Alec said.
It was two hours before Alec arrived at Harry's place. He had called Megan Allison, and she had arrived with PC Watkins in tow and what looked to Alec like half the Pinsent force. SOCOs had been in evidence only minutes later, and Alec and Naomi's home, now a crime scene, was cordoned and isolated.
Alec waited until all had been set in motion, and then he got someone to give him a lift across town, leaving Munroe to explain to Eddison once he arrived.
âDo we know who it was?' Naomi asked.
âHis name was Freddie Gains. He was a friend of Neil Robinson. They served time together. Munroe recognized the tattoo on his arm.'
âSo what now?' Naomi asked.
âI leave it to them. Eddison's been in touch, offered us a safe house. I've declined. I think I'm happier if we fend for ourselves. Harryâ?'
âTaken care of,' Harry said. âWe're going to take Mum up to her sisters, and Patrick has been on the Internet and we've managed to bring our flights forward. We think Florida might be far enough away from trouble. What about the two of you?'
âHere,' Patrick said. âI've charged these, so you can use yours right away. Then get another when you can. I've put the number of the other one in your phone.'
âWhatâ?' Alec looked at the tiny phone Patrick had placed in his hand.
âWe've got two. I take that one with me if I go out for the night. If I lose it, it's just a tenner gone and that includes top-up calls, and Dad takes the other one if we're out walking. I think it might be safer if, you know, we don't use our own.'
âI think you could be right. You've not registered either of these phones?'
Patrick shook his head. âGran's old car is in the garage,' he said. âI've started it up and checked the oil and water. We thought it might be best if you use that.'
âYou've thought of everything, haven't you?'
âProbably not,' Patrick said. âBut I think we've got the obvious stuff.'
âRight, I think we should leave. Be careful, Harry.'
âYou too.'
Minutes later and they were gone, headed in opposite directions, Alec setting out through Pinsent and then across country, watching in his mirror for any sign that they were being followed.
âYou think they'll be all right?' Naomi asked.
âYes, I think so. Eddison is convinced this all has to do with the original investigation. He thinks that's why Travers was targeted and why we have been.'
âBut they tried to
kill
Trav. They seem to be just trying to put the frighteners on us.'
âAnd succeeding at that. Naomi, I don't pretend to know, but I think Eddison might be on to something. Neil Robinson said or did something that no one saw the significance of at the time. I don't think even Robinson knew he'd done it. Then, my guess is, he saw or was told something that made him realize he knew something important. So he tried to tell Jamie.'
âIt must have been something she was involved in for him to make that connection. But what?'
âI'm guessing he must have confided in Freddie Gains, and maybe in his sister, Clara, too.'
âSo why just scare us? Why kill him and Jamie and now this Freddie Gains and not us? It doesn't make sense.'
âIt does if they think we have information. If they think we actually
know
what all this is about and can pass on whatever it is. Maybe they thought Jamie and Freddie Gains knew; maybe they tried to force that information out of them, but Jamie and Freddie simply didn't have it.'
âNeither do we,' Naomi pointed out, âand ignorance didn't keep Jamie safe, did it?'
âWhich is why we need to find whatever it is out,' Alec said.
âAnd how are we going to do that? And where are we going, anyway?'
âWales,' Alec said.
âWhat's in Wales?'
âOh, rain, sheep, hills, the odd mountain. And Clara, Neil Robinson's sister.'
TWENTY-THREE
I
f Jamie had simply kept to the brief she had been given, none of this would have happened, Gregory thought. She was a talented film maker and had a way with people; five minutes in her company and they were telling her their life story.
He paused, standing on the jetty and listening as he always did for sounds that might signal something not so ordinary. Gregory had been a little shaken when he'd recognized the image on the picture. His boat. She had never been registered as part of Madigor property. He had always filtered her ownership via other companies he had shares in. In fact, it had been with Neil's help that he had tightened this security, Neil's understanding of such things being broad and deep.
The
Jeannie
was not a new or an attractive vessel â a converted collier, she had been little more than a transporter with a cabin until Gregory had purchased and converted her. From the outside she was still unprepossessing; inside, she was home, far more home than his current house was, than anywhere else he had ever lived had been.
He had bought supplies, and he took them aboard now, started the engines and cast off before bothering to stow them. A sense of urgency affected him, and the feeling that he should put distance between himself and land. Between himself and those he now knew would be in pursuit.
Gregory was not afraid. It was simply that he didn't wish to be caught.
He chugged out into the gathering dusk, enjoying the last of the light, rounded the buoy that marked the harbour entrance and then followed the coastline around the headland before heading out into deeper water. The first stars emerged from a still pale sky. He loved this time of year with its long dusks.
Checking his charts again before dropping anchor, reassuring himself that he was in quiet waters here and hoping that no call had been put out to watch for the
Jeannie
, he went below and put away the provisions he had bought.
Gregory ate and then settled in front of his computer, searching through the files on Jamie Dale.
If she'd just stuck to the brief . . .
He recalled their first meeting: coffee, with a colleague of his, of Joshua Penbury's. Funny, he had now shed that persona so completely that it felt as though he was thinking of someone else. He had been employed as a technical adviser â not the first time he had taken such a role. Ex-military and with some experience in intelligence, according to his CV, Joshua Penbury was just one of a list of âexperts' brought on board from time to time as advisers to film-makers.