Authors: Nicci French
Tags: #General, #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #Psychological, #Suspense, #Women Sleuths, #Thrillers
35
"I want you to stick with me now," Oban had
said. So here I was beside him, standing once more on
Jeremy Burton's waterlogged lawn 435
and conscious all the while of Emily--watching us
out of her bedroom window with her thumb stuck in her
mouth. Jeremy had insisted we go outside
to talk, as if he felt oppressed in the house.
He was wearing only a short-sleeved shirt, no
jacket, but he didn't seem to feel the chilly
wind that was rippling round the garden. I was wearing a
cardigan but I still felt cold. Water seeped
through my shoes.
"I don't understand," he repeated. That was almost
all that he'd said since we arrived. He had
looked at the photographs of Daisy,
Lianne and Bryony, picking each one up and
holding it away from his face as if he was
long-sighted, before handing it back to Oban.
"No," he had said to each one. "No. I've
never seen this face. I've never heard this name.
No, no, no. I don't understand why you're showing
them to me."
"Your wife wrote down the names of the other
victims before she died," Oban said patiently.
"Lianne. And the name of the woman who was recently
attacked by the canal, Mrs. Teale--Bryony
Teale. And Daisy Gill was a girl who
killed herself a few months ago, and was
apparently a friend of Lianne's. Your wife also
wrote down her name."
"Why?" He shook his head vigorously, and
frowned at us as if he wouldn't quite make out our
shapes. "Why?" His face sagged. He looked
tired. His skin had a gray pallor to it and his
eyes were red-rimmed and looked sore.
"We don't know why, Mr. Burton," said
Oban. "We have only just found this new evidence,
and obviously it changes the way we're looking
at everything."
"Philippa never knew them," he insisted.
"She didn't."
"She wrote down their names."
"It's all a mistake," he said
frantically. "I can't explain it but it's all
a mistake. She never knew them."
"What makes you so sure?" I asked, as
gently as possible.
"She would have told me."
"What would she have told you?"
"Anything. Everything. All the things in her
life." For a moment he looked as if he was going
to burst into tears, but then he glared at us and started
striding down the garden. 437
"Mr. Burton," interjected Oban
firmly, "I know this is a shock but--was
"It's not a shock, it's--it's like a bad
dream."
"Could she have been threatened or ...?"
"I don't know why she wrote them down. Why
would anyone threaten her?" He suddenly stopped
walking and turned on us, so that we were standing in a
tight knot. "I know what you're thinking."
"What are we thinking?"
"That she was up to something. Having an affair,
or some such rubbish. Or maybe that I was.
Maybe I was having an affair with all those
women and she found out. Is that what you want me
to deny? All right, I deny it."
He walked away again.
"Jeremy." I caught up with him and put my
hand on his arm to slow him down. "Please listen
carefully. We are not suggesting anything or
assuming anything. Please listen. I know--was
"What do you know? Nothing. I'm not much good at
showing my emotions. I never have been. That
doesn't mean I don't feel them. Phil
knew that. She could see when I was down or
worried about something, or if work had got to me.
I would walk in through the door, and she would look
at my face and she'd know if I was all right or
not. I didn't have to say anything with her. We
weren't all over each other, nobody would call
us a passionate couple. But there are ways and
ways of loving someone. And I loved her and she
loved me, and now she's dead and you stand there
insinuating things about us and our life together. We had
a good life. The life we both wanted. Not
glamorous or anything like that. But we had each
other and then we had Emily. And we were trying for
another child. Then we would be a family, complete.
That's what she said. Now she's dead and we're
never going to be complete, are we?"
"Mr. Burton ..."
And then we both saw that he was crying. He
stood under the apple tree, bowed down by its
half-ripe fruit, and howled like a little boy
until his face was blotchy, and shiny with tears.
36
The next day I drove to the clinic, sat through
a meeting about staff structures and pretended to do
some paperwork. My brain was teeming with the events
of the last twenty-four hours. I thought about the list
of names; about Bryony's white, shattered face
when she heard; Jeremy's howls under the apple
tree.
And I didn't know what to do about W. Would he
be so angry with me he wouldn't talk to me? Did
I want to see him again? At a quarter 445
past six I phoned him. At about ten to nine I
looked at my watch as Will removed it from my
wrist and put it on the floor by his bed. When
I put it back on my wrist I had come out of the
shower. It was just after ten. He was lying in bed. I
lay down beside him. I was still damp from the shower and
he was still damp from sweat and sex and me. I
smelled of his soap and I could smell me all
over him.
"That was wonderful," I said, and then started
to apologize. "I always feel stupid saying that.
I feel as if I'm saying thank you for something."
I sat up with my back against the wall, propped
up with a pillow, and looked at the room. There were
the remains of a Chinese takeaway. An empty
wine bottle lying down and another a third
full. Our clothes were scattered.
"I'm sorry about yesterday afternoon," I said.
"I didn't know what to do."
"It doesn't matter," he said. He was
trailing his fingers over my body, but not looking
at me.
"That was what surprised me," I said. "It
really didn't seem to matter to you. I get
scared by police and I'm working with them. You
didn't seem bothered."
"Is that a problem?"
"Maybe I get more scared than you do."
"That's understandable."
"Oh, you mean this?" I raised my hand and
touched my cheek, my scar.
"What did you want?" he asked. "Should I
have got on my knees and started pleading my
innocence?"
"What do you mean, your "innocence"?"
"That's what you want as well, isn't it? You
want me to look you in the eye and say, "Kit,
I'm innocent. So help me God.""
"No," I protested. "But ..."
"Aha, so there is a but after all." He stood
up. "I'm going to have a shower."
I lay in bed, half covered by the thin sheet,
thinking. As soon as he came back into the room,
wrapped in a large white towel, I said, "You
know what the problem is?"
"Whose problem? Mine or yours?"
"You didn't lose your cool for a second in
there. You were perfectly in control."
"And the question is, would an innocent man behave like
that?" 447
"Don't you care, though?"
"What?" He raised his eyebrows. "About
what people think of me? Why should I?"
"No. No. I don't mean about what people think
of you. I mean about--well, all of it. Lianne
and Philippa and Daisy and now Bryony, and
you're involved in it somehow. Even if you have
absolutely nothing to do with it in a technical
term, you're involved. And you knew some of them,
W. You knew Lianne, and she was young and lonely
and in need of help, and now she's dead, they're
dead, and yet you just sat there with your ironic
smile, scoring points. I mean, I know you must
care somewhere, deep down, because otherwise why are you
doing this job and everything, so I know you care, of
course ..."
"No, you don't. It doesn't follow."
"Well, all right, maybe you don't care one
bit and I find that chilling."
Will gave a nasty smile. "More chilling than
the possibility that I might be capable of
murder? Maybe," he let his towel drop to the
floor in a white puddle, then pulled on a
robe, "maybe the possibility even excites
you? Do you like to think I'd be capable of killing
someone? I know you--you like to face your fears,
don't you? Feel the fear and do it anyway?" The
tone was mocking and cruel.
I sat up in the bed. "Listen, Will, let's
not play games like this. Please. For what it's
worth, I've met a few dozen killers, I
suppose. Maybe more. For all of them there are
big fat reports explaining why they did it.
I don't know of a single example where somebody
spotted them in advance as potential murderers.
In fact, several of them were let out by people like me and
killed somebody else. So I'm not going to stand
here and say that you couldn't kill a woman."
"Sit."
"What?"
"You're not standing, you're sitting."
"Oh, for God's sake. You're proving what
I'm saying. Look, what I'm trying to say
is that I was looking at you this afternoon. And I
suddenly thought you'd quite like people to think you'd done it.
It would be great in every way. You would be a victim
yet again. The great misunderstood Will Pavic. And
it would show how stupid the police were. It would be
pretty much your ideal situation--you being right and
everybody else being wrong. Which is your 449
basic world view."
Pavic's slow smile didn't waver. "So
I didn't manage to fool you?" he said.
I reached over and took his hand and pulled him
down beside me on the bed. I stroked his bristly
short hair. I kissed his forehead. I laid the
palm of my hand against his cheek and for the briefest
moment he leaned into x. "I've had rather a bad
year," I said. "I have bad dreams."
"Kit ..."
"My sex life had been non-existent for a
bit and just now it's been the best, and that's been so
nice. Nice is the wrong word. You know what I
mean, anyway. And sometimes I wonder whether
I'm falling in love with you."
"Kit ..." he said again. He wasn't joking
or sneering any longer. That was something. Even if
everything was about to come to an end, that was better than his
contempt.
"Maybe you're right," I continued. "And I'm
drawn to you because you're bad-tempered and
intimidating, and you scare me in some way. Or
maybe I want you because you seem unhappy and
I'm kidding myself that I can make you happy again--
you know, that mad female fantasy you've
probably read about. Whatever. I've been
happy, anyway, just feeling wanted again like this.
I've been happy when I've been working and
suddenly I let myself think of you. I have felt
myself coming back to life again. But I don't want
to be with someone who doesn't care about anything, and
who won't yield to anyone. I'm not much good at
passion with no tenderness. I'm not tough enough. And
I'm really very bad at playing games--well,
here I am putting all my cards on the table.
No aces, as you can see." I gave a small
laugh and he still didn't say anything. "So,
maybe I need someone with softer edges."
Will put up a hand and tucked a strand of wet
hair behind my ear.
"I think it will be harder for me than for you if
we stop seeing each other," I said. "I'm a
rotten leaver. I've never been any good at it.
You're probably better at it, though--I bet
you don't spend much time looking back."
"I still want to see you, Kit."
"You want to see me on your terms."
"What are your terms, then?"
"I don't know." I gave a small sob.
"But the point is, there are some." 451
He smiled. "That's completely
incomprehensible, you know."
"I know." He handed me a tissue and I
blew my nose. "Anyway, for tonight at least,
I'm going. And maybe that's what I should be doing
alt." I put a finger on his lip. "Ssh,
don't say anything else. Not now."
I stood up and pulled on my trousers and
shirt.
"I don't like the idea of you walking around here
at this time of night," Will said.
"I think I'll be all right," I said. "My
name wasn't on the list."