Listlessly, Gary picked up a cutting and began pulling the lower leaves off.
âNot like that! Take them off with the knife. They're liable to get fungus infection, else.'
It was steamy and humid at the end of the greenhouse where they were working. The bench in front of them was grainy with compost from the bin behind it, and stacked with three-inch flower pots. Becky's face was beetroot red and damp, her ginger hair stuck to it. Her square, capable hands, ingrained with dirt, worked deftly and lightly, taking up handfuls of sweet-smelling compost from the bin and lovingly inserting the cuttings into the three-inch pots. They would all be sold for a profit in the garden shop next year. If there was a next year. Her mum, who worked in the entrance kiosk, taking the money and dishing out tickets as people came through the gates, was of the opinion that this murder would be the end of Membery Place Gardens. It had fair knocked the old girl sideways, she said, meaning Alyssa. You didn't get over shocks like that at her age and besides, Becky's mum had said, she'd thought for some time that Alyssa was losing interest.
Gary, seeing someone noseying around outside, suddenly remembered a more important job to do and decided to abandon the cuttings. âYou finish these. I'd better go find some stuff to get that shed winder fixed afore old Arrer comes round. Been on about it for days, she has.'
âAnd don't forget to clear the glass up outside, neither. If you hadn't put all them heavy pots on that shelf it wouldn't have collapsed and they wouldn't have gone through the window in the first place.
Miss Arrow
,' Becky enunciated pointedly, âcould've given you the sack over that.'
âWho cares? I'm sick of this lark, any road. I could pull in a lot more down Tesco's, like, shelf-stacking.'
âBut you won't, will you?' Becky said shrewdly. “Cos you like it here â even though
she's
gone.'
âWho said that?' Gary demanded, his ears reddening for more reasons than one.
âI said it. And you can't dodge the police for ever, you know. They have to see everybody, stands to reason. Best get it over and done with â if you haven't done anything wrong, you've nothing to worry about, have you?'
What did she know about it? She'd never even seen the inside of the Felsborough nick, much less done community service for twocking a car, when he'd been like, tanked up a bit. Never forgotten that, they hadn't, the fuzz. Nor the time he'd nicked a cheapo video from Curry's and later tried to sell it at the car-boot sale in Dawson's field. Not even the ruckuses of a Saturday night after a few bevvies. They were ticking names off a list now and sooner or later, he'd be the only one left and he'd have to answer their questions.
âWhat am I going to do, Beck?' he moaned. He wasn't above asking her advice, in an emergency. She was that sort who always knew the answers. She'd had her life planned out from when she was in Year Nine, and ever since he'd come to work here, she'd been on at him to do likewise. It had been a mistake to let her see he didn't mind a bit of gardening. Well, it was all right, seeing things grow, like. But she thought he ought to go and get himself some GCSEs, then an A or two, and then go to college. What a laugh! Gaz going to college! His mates would piss themselves laughing if he did â not that he'd ever have a hope of getting in, never mind what old Beck said.
âWhat are you feeling so sorry for yourself for?' she asked suddenly. âYou look like a dying duck in a thunderstorm. All you have to do is tell the police she asked you to deliver that note.'
Gary looked hunted. Becky followed his gaze and saw that the woman detective who'd been asking for Gary yesterday and had been looking purposefully around outside for the last ten minutes, had now come into the
greenhouse and, dodging the hosepipes snaking along the floor, was making her way down the centre aisle between the staging to where they were working at the very end. He slipped out of the back door but he knew he'd left it too late.
Â
Â
Kate had left the uncommunicative Gary Brooker behind without regret. He'd obviously been ill at ease, but that wasn't surprising. The likes of Gary and his mates were rarely at ease with the police, usually having something they wanted to hide. No doubt what it was would be revealed in the fullness of time: meanwhile, she had managed to get out of him the admission that he had indeed delivered the letter to The Watersplash, and had been asked to do so by Bibi herself. He'd blushed painfully at the admission â
Gary Brooker,
blushing? Thoughtfully, she drove on until she came to the house in the woods.
Â
Â
Fran looked up as the car stopped by the front door and out of it came Sergeant Colville without her suit jacket, wearing a white sleeveless blouse tucked into her grey skirt as a concession to the heat. âHot, isn't it?' she greeted Fran.
âIt's cooler inside. Come in and I'll get you a drink. Cold, or would you prefer coffee?' Her own coffee had cooled and grown a disgusting grey skin. She'd been sitting there for over an hour and a half without noticing the time passing. âSorry I'm not dressed yet.' Nor showered, and her hair not even combed. Dark circles round her eyes, too, no doubt. Enough to frighten the horses. âI'm afraid I had a bad night. I slept late.'
âNot surprising, after yesterday. It was a rotten day for everybody. Yes, a cold drink would be lovely, thank you.' Looking disgustingly bright-eyed and bushy-tailed, the sergeant followed Fran into the kitchen and gazed round at the granite working surfaces and the stainless steel
equipment, noticing everything with miss-nothing, detective's eyes as Fran took ginger beer from the fridge, held it up and, receiving a nod, poured it into a tall glass. âNice kitchen. Wouldn't I just love one like it?' She laughed. âIn your dreams, Kate! Cheers.' She perched on a chair and raised the glass. âI have some news for you, good and bad.'
Fran, sitting opposite with her elbows on the table, felt a roll of fear. âJasie?'
âUh-huh. The good news first. We think there's every chance he may be alive and with his father.' And before the relief had time to flick in, she added, âThe bad news is that we don't know where his father is, and we can't be sure what his intentions are.'
Fran had known, of course, that the person who had written those letters must have been Jasie's father, though nowhere in them had this been openly stated. Now was the time to hand them over, yet somehow ⦠well, they were Mark's property, she reasoned, not hers to do with as she saw fit, or at any rate had been left in his keeping. Giving them to the police now, without telling him â well, there was the question of loyalty. On the other hand, telling
him
how she had found them might conceivably be worse. And yet, when she remembered the threats in them ⦠No, she told herself, she'd no right to withhold them from the police, even though they seemed to have worked it out, anyway. And yet â
The telephone rang again. âFran, it's me. We were cut off, I'm sorry.'
âWhere are you ringing from, Mark? Tell me where I can ring you back, I can't talk just now, I've got someone from the police with me.'
She immediately wished she hadn't mentioned that when he said sharply, âWhat are they doing there? OK, don't answer that, they'll be all ears ⦠I wish you weren't having all this hassle.'
âMe too, but I can't do anything about it â and it's OK, really. I can cope.'
He hesitated, but then gave her a number readily enough, which she carefully wrote down. âSure you're all right, Fran?'
âYes, sure. In about half an hour?' she said hurriedly. That would put a time limit on her deliberations, force her to make a decision about those letters, and what she should do.
âBye till then. Love you, all the time.'
âLove you, too, Mark.'
Sergeant Colville didn't trouble to hide the fact that she'd been listening and understood the side of the conversation she'd heard. âYour husband?' she asked as Fran turned from the telephone.
âYes. He's in Brussels.'
âFor long?'
âI don't think he'll be home just yet. He's an architect and he has this commission there, you see, it's important â'
âWell, I don't see anything would be gained by interfering with his work,' she said reasonably. âWhere were we?'
âJasie?'
âRight, yes â well, we have to hope his father has no intention of harming him, and simply wants to gain custody. But there's no knowing what he might do if we try to take him away, people don't always act rationally in such situations, especially men like Graham Armstrong.'
Graham Armstrong. The name gave more substance, added another dimension to the dark shadow, the evil persona behind the spate of hatred poured out into those letters. âHe surely can't expect he'll be allowed to keep Jasie, a man like that â and after murdering his mother!'
âHang on! We don't have any proof yet that he did.'
âBut surely â'
âI'll admit it looks like that but â hear me out, Mrs Calvert â Fran, if I may?' Fran nodded. âAnd I'm Kate. Let me put you in the picture.'
Fresh from the interview with Chip, Kate had it all at her fingertips, and gave Fran the gist of it crisply, stopping just
short of the point where Armstrong had set fire to Bibi's house, watching Fran closely to see how the news was received. She'd a pretty shrewd idea, from the way Fran had reacted, that she'd been in the dark until then about Bibi's previous life, but she still hoped that the half-hour she'd allocated to spend here might not turn out to be a complete waste of time. She was, however, beginning to have her doubts about it. Fran seemed vague and disorientated this morning, no doubt due to having slept badly, as she said she had, last night. At the same time, Kate was convinced that hidden behind that veiled, smoky-blue regard was something that she was keeping to herself.
Fran decided she needed more coffee before hearing what else Kate Colville had to say, and this time Kate agreed to join her. When it was made, Fran sipped and listened in silence to the remainder of the sorry story, as related by Chip. Her eyes widened in horror as she heard about the sick attempt by Armstrong on Bibi's â and Jasie's - life. There was so much in it that explained Bibi â what she was and how she'd acted. But even so it left a lot still unexplained. Why, for instance, had she refused to confide in anyone when she began to be threatened once more? Miserably, Fran felt this as a personal failure on her part â she really ought not to have taken so literally Chip's request not to question Bibi about her life before she'd come to Membery. Surely, if she had approached it sensitively, Bibi might have felt she could help? Though in the end, perhaps she
had
begun to feel that she needed to unburden herself about those awful letters â yes, that was surely why she'd rung her at the office in such a state. But what had happened that day to force her to do that? If only she'd spoken sooner! The only explanation was that her fear of her ex-husband's reprisals must have been overwhelming enough to keep her worries from everyone, even Chip, though in a way Fran thought she could understand this last. Chip wasn't renowned for being the most sensitive of souls, and like most men, he would have taken
an aggressive stance, which might only have made matters worse.
Yet she had confided in Mark.
âSo that's it,' Kate said, âthat's what we know so far.'
âSo this madman's got Jasie? But that's terrible!'
âIt looks possible. We can only hope he won't do anything stupid. Everything will be done to make sure he doesn't.' Kate was cautious, mulling over in her careful way what they had learned, smothering her own doubts about this and other aspects of the case which she hadn't yet felt able to come to terms with, and Fran looked anything but reassured. âWe should know where he is pretty soon. He was released on licence, he's under probationary supervision, which means he has to report regularly to his probation officer. And notify him of any change of address.'
âAnd you believe he would do that? In the circumstances?' Fran couldn't hide her scepticism.
Kate drained her coffee but declined a refill. âLet's cross bridges when we come to them. I'll keep you informed as and when we hear anything. For now, I'd better be getting on, or I'll have Dave Crouch on my tail.'
âRather you than me.'
A quizzical look, followed by an odd little smile. âHe's not all he appears on the surface. He's a damn good detective, you know.'
âI'm sure he is.'
âJust not very good with people.'
The hard-nosed policeman with a heart of gold? Fran wasn't going to fall for that one. Policemen were no different from anyone else. Some, just like other men in other jobs, were simply bastards.
âHow long have you been working with him?'