Authors: Nicci French
Tags: #General, #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #Psychological, #Suspense, #Women Sleuths, #Thrillers
7
I woke and slept in snatches and then finally
I woke up late. I gulped some coffee as
I ran around getting myself ready. Julie came
out of her room wearing nothing except an old
jacket of mine she must have found in the cupboard
of the spare room that I had made a partial
attempt at turning into a study. Now her
room. We were going to have to have a talk about things.
She looked like a rodent that had been dragged out of
hibernation. Her hair was a mass of fluff, her
eyes narrow as if she needed to keep out of the
light. "I didn't know you were getting up so
early," she said. "I'd have made you some
breakfast."
"It's twenty to nine," I said, "and I'm in
a rush."
"I'll do some shopping," she said.
"Don't bother."
"It's no bother."
8
As I reached the street I was trembling with
suppressed emotion. I wanted to do something
extreme and violent, like throwing a large object
through a shop window or leaving the country, assuming
a new identity and never coming back to Britain as
long as I lived. I would settle for going
home, locking the door and not emerging for a week.
When I got back to my car, the BMW was
gone. Doubtless I would soon be hearing from an
insurance company. "We have been notified by our
client ..." A scrape along two panels.
How much would that cost?
My flat had a wonderful clattery
emptiness about it. Julie wasn't home. This was
a precious opportunity. I ran a bath,
poured some exotically and absurdly named salts
into the water, grabbed a newspaper and a magazine
and slid into the water like a walrus. I quickly
tossed aside the newspaper and read the
magazine: I read about the five best
country-house weekend getaways for under a
hundred pounds, I learned seven ways to shock
your man in bed and I answered a questionnaire
entitled "Are You a Homebody or a Party
Animal?" It turned out that I was a party
animal. Why did I so rarely go to parties?
Finally I tossed aside the magazine as
well and slowly slid down the bath until only
my nose and mouth protruded above the surface
of the water. Unconcerned, I heard the phone
ring, once, and the intervening beep of the
answering-machine. I imagined lying in a flotation
tank. A saline solution adjusted to give you
perfect buoyancy, maintained at the 109
same temperature as that of your body. Darkness.
What was the point? were you totally detached or
totally absorbed? I knew that either a very short
time felt extremely long or else it was the
other way round.
I felt a succession of thumps and the slamming
of the door. Julie. It sounded as if she had
kicked the door shut. Time to get back into the
world. I dried myself slowly as if to delay the
inevitable, then wrapped the towel around my body
and stepped out.
"Fantastic," said Julie. "Bath in the
daytime. That's the way to live."
"It feels a bit illicit," I
admitted, though at the same time I felt
irritated at being teased for self-indulgence
by somebody who had spent years drifting around the
world.
"Don't worry about supper," she said
brightly. "I was looking at a couple of your
cookbooks and I went out and did some shopping.
Are you in this evening?"
"Yes, but I hadn't really planned--was
"Great. Let me take care of you. It's a
secret but don't worry about it. It's all very
light. Very healthy. By the way there's a message
for you on the answering-machine from someone called
Rosa. Sorry, I didn't know you were here and
I was expecting a call. I'm not sure if I
pressed the right button. I might have erased it
by mistake."
She had. I went and got dressed very quickly and
simply. I wasn't going out. I pulled on
some white jeans and a pale blue sweater. I was
tempted to ignore Rosa's message. I
couldn't think of any good news it could possibly
be. But I counted to ten and dialed.
"We need to meet," Rosa said immediately.
"What for?"
"It's to do with the police. I understand you didn't
follow my advice. It's not exactly a
surprise, but it would have been nice to have been
told."
"Oh," I said, with my heart sinking. "Right.
Shall I come in sometime tomorrow?"
"I'd like to see you today. Is it all right if
I see you at home?"
"Why? I mean fine," I said.
"I'll be about an hour," Rosa said, and
hung up. 111
I began a farcically ineffectual attempt
at tidying the living room to the slightly alarming
sounds of Julie doing things in the kitchen. In
fact, it was barely forty-five minutes before there
was a knock at the door.
I ran down the stairs and opened the door with a
rehearsed cheery greeting that froze as I looked
out on the step. "Oh," was all that I could
manage, which I think was what I had said to Rosa
on the phone.
"I'm not alone," she said.
She wasn't alone. Standing beside her was
Detective Chief Inspector Oban. Behind
him was a car. A BMW.
"I'm sorry about the car," I said. It was
all I could think of, but as I said it I realized
that if you can only think of one thing it doesn't
mean you have to say it. It may be that the one thing you can
think of is the very worst thing to say. "It was
completely my fault. I'll pay for it at
once. I know that the first rule of crashing is never
to admit responsibility but it was completely my
responsibility."
Rosa looked puzzled and Oban gave a
faint smile. "A parking problem," he said to her
in explanation. Then he looked back at me.
"That was you, was it? There was a note, but it had been
rained on. Don't worry, I think the damage
will be treated as having happened in the course of
duty."
"Which it did," I said. "In a way."
I had run out even of foolish things to say, so
I held open the door and stood aside as they
made their way past me. At first I'd thought, in
some paranoid way, that it was because of the damage to the
car, leaving the scene of a crime, or something like that.
But it clearly wasn't that, so what was going on?
Had some sort of official complaint been made?
I followed them up the stairs. As we reached the
living room, Julie came out of the kitchen
looking rather striking in a striped butcher's apron,
my apron. She looked surprised. I
introduced everybody.
Oban shook hands with Julie slightly
awkwardly. "You're, erm--was he said.
"Julie's staying here for a few days," I
interrupted.
What was he talking about? Then I looked at
Julie, tall, tanned, Amazonian. Oh,
God, he probably thought this was some 113
sort of gay thing. I considered trying to explain
our relationship, then couldn't really see the point.
"I'm just making our supper," Julie said,
sounding horribly domestic. "Do you want
to stay?"
"It's just a work meeting," I said hurriedly.
The thought of Julie and me starting to entertain as a
couple made me shudder.
"You're really a detective?" Julie said
to Oban.
"I really am," he said.
"That must be amazing."
"Not most of the time." Oban looked toward
Rosa, who had picked out a book from a shelf and
was flicking through it with a frown of concentration. "Could
you excuse us?" he said, with careful politeness
to Julie.
"What? Me?" said Julie in surprise.
"I'll get back to the kitchen."
She scuttled away. When she was gone,
Rosa pushed the book back into the shelf and
turned to me.
"Please sit down," I said.
We all sat, slightly awkwardly, with
Rosa and me side by side on the sofa, while
Oban pulled over the chair so that he faced me.
"Dan Oban phoned me this morning--was
"Rosa," I interrupted, "I know I should have
..."
She held up a hand to silence me. "Wait,"
she said. She turned to Oban. "Dan?" They
obviously knew each other well.
"I'm sorry about all this," I charged in again,
before he could speak. "I was in a bit of a state
anyway, and I was so cross about the entrapment, the
whole idea of it, that I couldn't stop myself. But
it was unprofessional and ..."
"You were right," Oban said.
I couldn't see his expression because as he
spoke he was leaning forward, rubbing his eyes. He
was tired.
"What?"
"The whole idea was disastrous. You were right.
I've been talking to some people in Legal and, as you
said, it's likely that the tape would be totally
inadmissible as evidence. That poor girl was
leading Doll by the nose. As it were." He
gave a sheepish grin toward Rosa, which he
suppressed immediately when she frowned back.
"So," I said, with a shrug. "Good." 115
"That's not what I was coming to say. I rang
Dr. Deitch because I want you back."
"Back?"
"That was good, clear-headed work. I want you on
the investigation."
"I don't think that's a good idea."
"Why?"
"Lots of reasons. For a start, can you imagine
me working with Furth again? He was steaming."
"Furth's my problem. He is no longer in
charge of the investigation, anyway. I am."
"Oh," I said. "But, still, I don't think
I've got anything to offer. I haven't done much
of this sort of thing before. Any, really. I just work
with men like Doll. I've got no ideas."
Oban stood up and paced toward the window, then
turned. "This is a simple case," he said.
"This is the most basic, horrible murder. Find
a woman in a lonely place, kill her, run
away. He's still out there. We just need to get a
bit lucky. Just a little bit and we'll get
him."
"Why did you ring Rosa?" I said
suspiciously. "Why not me?"
"Because he wanted to know what I thought," Rosa
said.
"You mean whether I'm crazy?" I said.
Rosa couldn't keep a straight face. "I
wouldn't presume to comment on that," she said. "He
wanted to know if it was fair to ask you."
"And you said?"
"That he should ask you."
"You mean ask me whether it was fair to ask
me?"
She shrugged.
"What do you think?" said Oban.
"I'll think about it," I said tamely.
"That's good," said Oban. "I just want you
aboard. You name the terms. You've got a free
hand. I'll give you whatever you need."
The door burst open and Julie appeared.
She was carrying a tray. Where the hell had she
found that? On it were three dishes.
"Before you say anything," she said, "this isn't
supper. It's just a snack. You'd like some,
wouldn't you, Mr. Detective?"
"Very much," said Oban, looking at the tray
eagerly. "What is it?"
"They're the simplest things. This is some ham
and figs, this is an artichoke salad and 117
this is just a little omelette made with zucchini.
I'll get some plates."
She returned, not just with plates and forks but with
glasses and an opened bottle of red wine. A
very expensive bottle of wine belonging to Albie
that he had forgotten to collect but would remember
sometime in the future. So Julie was good for something
after all. She generously topped up our
glasses. Both Oban and Rosa helped themselves
to all three dishes.
"This is very good, Julie," Rosa said.
"Delicious," said Oban. "I must say, this
seems a very good arrangement. How long have you and
Kit, you know, er ..."
"Oh, just a couple of weeks," said Julie
brightly.
I drained my glass in one gulp.