Authors: Nicci French
Tags: #General, #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #Psychological, #Suspense, #Women Sleuths, #Thrillers
24
Two days after Doll had been attacked, I
went back to the Burtons' house, not because I
thought it was a particularly fruitful idea but because
Oban pressed me into x. "Something odd about the
bloke," he'd said.
"Something odd about most people," I replied.
"He's not upset enough."
I wondered what that meant. Jeremy Burton
had seemed upset enough to me, with his hopeless, tired
face, his little grimaces of bafflement and misery.
Was there a right amount of grief, then? How did you
measure it? I thought about the thousands of people who'd
laid flowers on the site where Philippa's
body had been found, and wept copiously for a
pretty young mother and for the little girl she had left
behind. Was that grief? I didn't say any of this
to Oban, of course--he'd just have raised his
eyebrows ironically and sent Seb instead.
I arrived at the house on a Sunday
morning, as Jeremy Burton had requested.
Philippa's mother opened the door, and ushered me
through the hall and into the gleaming kitchen. There were
flowers everywhere--faded velvet irises,
shriveled ox-eye daisies and numerous vases
of white lilies, whose thick, oppressive
fragrance filled the house. As I passed the
living room, I saw banks of condolence cards
on the mantelpiece and the table.
I looked out of the kitchen window. The father and
daughter were in the garden together, sitting on a
wrought-iron bench with their backs to the window. He
was doing a crossword, and she was kicking her legs
back and forth. Something made him look round, and
I raised a hand and made my way out into the garden
and across the lawn. He gave a nod of
recognition. I had worried about blundering back
in but he didn't seem displeased to see me.
We shook hands and he folded up the paper
self-consciously, although not before I'd noticed he
hadn't filled in a single clue. He was wearing
an open-necked T-shirt and khaki shorts, but
nevertheless looked rather neat and smart. Some people always
look respectable, I thought, and some people never do.
Give Doll a bath, a haircut, a shave,
a manicure, dress him in a 307
thousand-pound suit, and he'd still look unwashed and
somehow unsavory. You couldn't clean off his past.
"Look," said Emily.
I crouched down. She had laid her
treasures on the bench beside her. There was a round
gray stone and a sharp white one, a forked stick, a
feather, a clump of moss, a small pink
bouncing ball smeared with mud, an old cat's
collar, a wooden ice-cream stick, a plastic
tube.
"Look," she said again, and uncurled her
plump fist. There was a small shell on the
palm of her hand.
"Where did you find that?" I asked.
She pointed to the graveled area near the kitchen
door.
"It's lovely," I said, and she closed her
fist over it again. She was wearing a spotted
sundress, and her hair was clipped back behind
her ears, making her face seem thinner than
I'd remembered.
"I'm going to give them to Mummy," she said,
in a self-important voice. I glanced at
her father.
"She means, put them on Phil's grave
after she's buried," he explained, wincing. "It
was my mother-in-law's idea, that Emily should
collect things for her. I'm not so sure. She
seems to be taking the idea a bit too
literally." He frowned so that a small furrow
appeared over the bridge of his nose.
"What else have you found?" I asked Emily.
She climbed carefully down from the bench, shell
in one hand, and started to gather up the treasures with the
other. "Come and see," she said.
"Can I come in a minute? First I need
to talk to your father."
She nodded. The stones and moss and plastic
tube fell on the grass. She knelt down and
started to pick them up. Her father made no move
to help her. His hands were thrust into the pockets of
his shorts, his newspaper tucked under one arm. I
glanced across at him. His face looked bruised
with tiredness. "I tell you what, Emily, why
don't I bring those to you when I come and see what
else you've found for your mother?"
"Promise?"
"Yes."
"Don't forget that." She pointed to the plastic
tube, lying at my feet. 309
"I won't."
We watched her as she plodded away from us.
"She thinks Philippa's coming back."
"Does she?" I looked at her straight
back and spindly legs as she disappeared through the
kitchen door.
"Won't you sit down?" He pointed to the
bench.
"Thanks."
"Coffee?"
"No, thanks, I'm fine."
He sat down too, at the other end of the bench.
"I heard about your contribution," he said.
"Oh, well ..."
"I underestimated you, I think."
"How are you doing?" I asked.
"All right."
"Sleeping OK?"
"Yes. Well, no, not really. You know. I
wake and ..." He trailed off.
"Eating?"
He nodded.
"I talked to Tess Jarrett a few days
ago. She said that Philippa seemed distracted
during the last few weeks before her death. Do you
think that's true?"
"No, I don't." I waited. "I'm
sorry. That's all I can say."
"She didn't seem to have anything on her
mind?"
He stared down at the ground, as if he was
trying to pretend I wasn't there. "She seemed
the same as usual."
"Tell me about the night before she died.
Describe your evening together."
He sighed and started intoning in a monotonous
voice: "I came back from work at seven.
Emily was in bed and Philippa was reading her a
story. We both said good night to Emily."
"What did Philippa say, when she said good
night?"
"What did she say?" He blinked at me.
"Do you know, I can't remember. We went
downstairs and I poured us both a glass of wine
and we walked round the garden together. It was a nice
evening." His voice was getting a bit less
clipped. "We had supper outside, there." He
pointed at the table on the patio.
"What did you eat?"
"Moussaka. Green salad." 311
"What did you talk about?"
"I can't remember." He looked distressed.
"I can't remember anything, except at some
point she asked me if I thought she was looking
older."
"What did you say?"
He flicked something I couldn't see off his
shorts. "I must have said something about how she always
looked beautiful to me, but I can't remember the
exact words."
"So, there was nothing different about her, or your
relationship with her?"
He spoke now as if he were waking from a deep
sleep. "Different? I don't know what you're
digging for. Do you think this was something to do with me? Or
her? She wasn't depressed. She didn't
drink. She didn't take drugs. She
didn't wander round Kersey Town like that girl
..."
"Lianne."
"Yes. She got up in the morning and made
me breakfast. She looked after the house. She
looked after Emily. She met friends. She was
happy. She talked about when she should return
to work. She talked about having more children one day.
Soon." His voice cracked slightly, but he
went on, "Then, one morning, after she had made
breakfast and tidied up the house, she went out with
her child and she was suddenly murdered. End of story.
That's what the police think anyway, and so does
that other doctor who's been round here asking questions.
If you've got reasons for thinking differently,
please tell me what they are. I want to know."
I stood up. "I'm sorry to distress you."
I stooped down and picked up the clump of
moss, the two stones, the plastic tube. "Is
it OK if I take these to Emily?"
"She'll probably be in her bedroom. Top
of the first flight of stairs."
"Thanks."