Authors: Maureen Carter
Sarah hoped any word would be in the chief's favour because Rust â unlike King â was hell bent on a complaint and on firmer ground. Coats flapping, they were keeping pace across the car park to her Audi. Sarah held no brief for James Rust. He was an arrogant twat. But was he a guilty arrogant twat? With Baker itching to charge a man with offences he may not have committed, it was imperative now that they speak to Olivia. âHave you got the tape, Dave?'
âSure have.' Harries tapped a pocket. While they were at the hospital, Olivia could also listen to the hoax bomb call. If anyone could put a name to the voice, it would be her. Assuming the medicos said she was fit enough to be interviewed, neither hell, high water nor Elizabeth Kent was going to stand in the way this time.
âAll we need now is a memory card.'
FORTY-ONE
â
B
elieve me, I'd tell you more if I could, Inspector.' Olivia turned her head to the wall, strands of greasy hair splayed across the pillow. Sarah cut the latest in a series of so-help-me glances at Harries. Elizabeth Kent sat in the corner like a tigress ready to pounce the second she thought her daughter needed protection. Olivia had told them the last thing she remembered was going to bed on Saturday night, falling asleep reading. Sarah was beginning to suspect it had been a book of fairy tales.
âLet's try one more time, Miss Kent.' She gave a thin smile.
âI'm so tired. I just want to forget everything.'
âYou say you can't remember anything.' Sharper than she'd intended. At least it prompted the woman to turn back her head.
âA figure of speech, Inspector. That's all. I can't recall anything important.'
âWhy not let me be the judge of that?'
âI don't need a judge. I just need peace and quiet, time to recover properly.'
And I need something to go on
. âYou remember nothing about your abductor? Nothing at all, Miss Kent?'
âNo, sorry.' She sighed. âIt could have been anyone.'
âMiss Kent.' Clenched fist. âHe wanted to kill you.'
âBut he didn't. I don't think he ever intended to.'
âHow can you possibly know that?'
âIt's just a feeling.'
âA feeling . . .' She exchanged eye-rolls with Harries.
âIt was probably a power thing. Wanting to see me suffer.'
âWhy would he want to see you suffer? Unless he knows you.'
And you know him
.
âNo, no. You're not listening. It could have been anyone. I was just in the wrong place at the wrong time.' She had to know how lame that sounded.
âYou were in your own bed, for God's sake.' Much sharper than intended. Harries' pen stilled.
âDI Quinn . . .?' Mrs Kent's skirt rustled.
Sarah flapped a hand. âYou were found in a basement. Did he stay with you the whole time?'
âI can't remember.'
âHow did the fire start?'
âI don't know. Please.' She closed her eyes. âCan't you leave it for now? I've had enough.'
âNot really, Miss Kent. You see, we have a man in custody.'
Three- to four-second pause. âOh?'
âYes.' She waited, wanting eye contact.
âWho are you holding?'
Another pause. âJames Rust.' Emotions raced across Olivia's face; but in the split second it took to hide them, Sarah hadn't been able to read them: Shock? Fear? Incredulity? The revelation hadn't elicited a verbal response. âSo is it possible Mr Rust's your abductor, Miss Kent?'
âI don't know.' Eyes closed again, she bit her lip. âI told you, it could have been anyone. I don't remember. And whoever it was wore a mask.' Blurted out. Her eyes widened momentarily. Had she lied? Or was her memory coming back?
âA mask?'
âI think.'
âYou think.' She glanced at Harries. Pass the stone, Dave. It was like drawing blood.
âEither he was or wasn't, Miss Kent.'
âEverything's so confused, so hazy. I can barely think at all.' There was a catch in the voice and her eyes brimmed.
Sarah fought the urge to give the woman something to cry about. âWe're almost done, Miss Kent.' She nodded at Harries. âI'd like you to listen to something before we go. Tell me if you recognize the voice.'
The tape was cued. âReady?' Harries hit play.
â
Listen up, OK. An hour from now a bomb will go off in the high dependency unit. I could make it quicker. But I won't, OK. Oh, yeah â and happy hunting, Mr Plod.'
âMiss Kent?'
She glanced at her mother. âI've never heard it before in my life.'
Elizabeth opened her mouth to speak.
âMrs Kent?'
The older woman shook her head, dropped her gaze. âNo, nothing, sorry.'
âShe's lying, Dave.' Sarah clasped a white mug with both hands, her knuckles were the same shade. The detectives were holding an interview post-mortem at Greggs during a quick pit stop on the way back to HQ. First, she'd put in the obligatory call to the chief. He'd been so not thrilled.
âWhich one?' Harries' drawl probably meant he thought both the Kents culpable. He was ploughing his way through a plate of cream horns. She'd already told him she wasn't hungry but her eyes and stomach were demanding a second opinion.
Get thee behind me
. . .
She took a sip of coffee. âBut why lie, for God's sake? Anyone would think she doesn't want us to find the guy who did this.'
âThe chief's convinced we have. So where does it leave Rust, boss? Sure you don't want one?'
âOf course I want one.' Snippy. Waving away the plate.
âSo why . . .?' Puzzled frown, then: âAh. I see.'
She doubted it. Unlike Harries, she had to watch her weight. The boy wonder put it away like a horse on a bad diet. He probably thought cholesterol was a washing-up liquid. âLet's get back to the Kents, eh, Dave?'
âShe didn't say it wasn't Rust, did she?' How many double negatives did he want?
She nodded. âTrue.' Olivia Kent couldn't categorically clear the head teacher, without revealing the memory loss was convenient and landing herself in the mire. âBut if it's not him, who's she protecting, Dave?'
âHerself?' He licked some errant cream. âMaybe she thinks if she keeps mum, the kidnapper'll just go away, give it up. If she can't name him, she's no threat.'
âBut the corollary to that is she's protecting him, too. Why would she do that? And will she go as far as sacrificing Rust?'
âTurn the old goat into a scapegoat, you mean?'
Lip curled, she dodged a few pastry flakes; for a second she thought he meant Baker. âWe can't let her do that, Dave.'
âWhat about Barfoot, boss?'
The athletic architect
. âHis movements pan out so far, don't they?' Shona Bruce had put in the checks; it looked like the only thing of which Mr Smarmy was guilty was a predilection for dressing up in uniforms. She gave a tight smile. âWe could bring him in for impersonating a police officer. You finished here?'
Walking in step back to the motor, Harries' new shades got an airing. The sun had brought out Sunday shoppers en masse, if not to mass. It almost felt like a day off. She gave a crooked smile: yeah, right.
âY'know, boss. You shouldn't worry about the odd cake now and again.'
âI beg your pardon?'
âBack there. I thought you might be worried about putting on weight.' He must have caught the set of her profile. âNot that I think for one minute . . .'
âGot that right.'
The silence wasn't golden â more like that of the lambs.
Harries cast a sheepish glance. âI didn't mean it like that. I think you're in great shape . . .'
âFor my age?'
âWhy do you have to be so defensive? A little toning here and there, perhaps. I go running. You could come out with me â see if you like it.'
She sniffed. âThought I was in great shape.'
âEveryone has to work at it, boss. You'd love it once you got into it.'
âI don't have time.' She aimed the remote at the car. Locks clunked open.
âYou have to make time. It's worth it for the benefits. All that fresh air, feel-good factor.'
âEnough already. I'll think about it.' Like hell. âTell you who I'd really like to bring in for a little chat?' She waited until he'd fastened the seat belt.
âJack Howe.' Harries was with her already.
She'd put feelers out with the NYPD the morning after King revealed Howe's existence. The fact he'd been married to Olivia, maybe still was, added to Sarah's interest.
âI'm surprised you didn't mention him at the hospital, boss. You've still got the pic, haven't you?'
The wedding photograph. Oh yes. She'd considered whipping it out of her briefcase. But Olivia Kent must have had damn good reason to keep the marriage secret. Sarah regarded the picture as leverage, didn't want to show her hand too soon.
âAll in good time, Dave.'
FORTY-TWO
C
aroline King had wasted enough time. Her patience, rarely a strong suit, was running out. She'd sat stifling yawns and making small talk with Olivia for nearly an hour, waiting for Elizabeth to bale out so she could get to the main point. âSo, why didn't you tell me about Jack?'
âTell you what?' Lethargic, disinterested.
âThat you were married.'
âMarried? Where did you get that ridiculousâ?'
âDon't. I've seen the picture, Olivia. You were married.'
Caroline heard her wristwatch tick in the silence. If Olivia didn't talk soon, she was out of here.
Her neck constricted as she swallowed. âWe still are.'
âWhat! Why the hell keep it to yourself? I thought we were best friends and I find out from the cops.'
âYou're not my keeper, Caroline. Some things are . . .' She closed her eyes.
âAre, what?'
âI don't want to talk about it.'
âOK. Suit yourself.' It was a bluff but Olivia didn't call until Caroline was at the door.
âPlease, Caro. Don't go.'
The reporter pulled her still-warm chair closer to the bed. Tears ran down Olivia's cheeks, a judder ran through her frail frame. Caroline watched, waited until she was more composed. âCome on, Livvie â' she dabbed her friend's face with a tissue â âit can't be that bad. You know what they say about a problem shared?'
The stab at a smile was pitiful. âI'll tell you everything, Caro. But I have to see Jack first.'
The reporter's mouth tightened. âHe is mixed up in this, isn't he?'
Eyes cast down. âHe could be.'
âCould?' What the hell did that mean? Caro's patience was again on the wane.
âThe man who held me captive wore a mask. Lots of masks. A different face every time. Mind games. Isn't that what they call it?'
âAnd you think it could be Jack?' Caro winced watching Olivia chew her lip.
âHe hates me.'
In Caroline's experience, lots of men hate their wives; they don't all try and kill them. âGo on.'
âSomething happened.' The pauses were getting longer. âIn New York.'
She saw an internal debate playing on Olivia's face. Her urge to prompt was strong but staying silent was usually more effective.
âI've never told a living soul, Caro. I prayed I wouldn't have to.' Panic flitted in her eyes. âElizabeth must never know.'
Caro still took the silent witness role.
âWe had a baby.'
âWhat?' Had to speak. No way had she seen that coming.
âGrace. She died.'
âLivvie, I'm so sorry.'
âThere was an accident. She fell from a window. Seven floors up.' The voice was a flat drone. But once started, it was as if she had to relate everything. âThe window was open. Jack blamed me for that. I went to answer the door.'
Caroline felt the colour drain from her face. Olivia was like a wax statue staring ahead. âShe was tiny, barely started to crawl.' The brittle laugh made Caroline jump. âImagine it. I find two Jesus freaks wanting to talk about eternal life and Grace . . .'
âLivvie, don't.'
âI couldn't tell anyone. You do see that, don't you, Caro?'
âShush, Livvie. 'Course, I do.' But she didn't. âAnd Elizabeth has no idea?' Tentative.
âShe doesn't even know about the wedding.'
âBut, why, Livvie?' It didn't make sense.
âGod, it sounds so stupid now but . . . We wanted it to be a surprise.'
The reporter raised an eyebrow. â
You
did?'
âI could never lie to you, could I, Caro?' Deep sigh. âYou're right. It was Jack's idea.'
âBut when you were pregnant, when the baby came along? Surely you wanted Elizabeth to know?'
âWe . . . Jack . . . I . . .'
âAre you saying he stopped you, didn't give you a choice?'
âThe plan was we'd come over with Grace and give Elizabeth the biggest surprise of her life.'
Give her a cardiac arrest, more like. Caroline smiled. Suspected she was being played like a violin. The story didn't add up, there were gaping holes. As a reporter she'd have to fill them. And a reporter always needed both sides.
âWe were just a few days away from leaving for England when the accident happened. The only way I could survive it was to blank it out. Bury every memory. That way it never happened. Easier said . . . I relived it a thousand times, always with a different ending. I'd change the position of the furniture, or the window would be closed, or I wouldn't answer the door. Worse was when I dreamt about Grace. She'd be alive and smiling. And then I'd wake up. And want to die.'
âAnd Jack?'
âHe wanted to kill me.'