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‘That was the time he got tangled up with that Dutch boat,’ she went on.

‘What was that?’

‘Well, we’d been going for a while, and it was fun at first, rushing through the dark, standing at the wheel with David’s arm round me, drinking champagne, with the wind whipping past. But eventually I started to get seasick – when it goes really fast it kind of skips and bumps on the waves, and my stomach was getting jolted. I told him I wasn’t feeling too hot, and after a bit he says he’ll stop. And he makes me a hot cup of tea and puts brandy in it and tucks me up in the bunk below with a hot water bottle. He was so gentle when he was taking care of me,’ she said with a tremble of the lips. ‘I think I dropped off for a bit, with the brandy, and being warm and relaxed. Anyway, I started to feel better, and I didn’t want to spoil his night, so I thought about getting up and going on deck again. And then I heard another boat coming up fast. I sat up and looked out of the window, just as it sort of whirled round and came to a stop beside us. And a man started shouting something. I couldn’t hear what it was. David shouted back, and it sounded as though they were having an argument. Anyway, after a bit the other boat starts up again and roars away. Then David comes down to see how I am.

‘I asked him about the other boat, and he said it was some Dutchman making out this was his fishing spot and complaining David was in the wrong place. But David sorted him out. Then he said he was going to take me home, because I wasn’t well. I said I was feeling a bit better and I didn’t want to spoil his fishing, but he said he’d sooner see I was all right, so we went back. That was the only time I went out with him. It was really a man thing, his fishing, and he was better off doing it alone.’

Slider’s mind was working so hard he wondered there wasn’t smoke coming out of his ears. ‘You don’t happen to remember the name of the Dutch boat, do you?’ he asked.

She raised her eyebrows. ‘Why on earth do you want to know that? It was just some old—’ She stopped as something obviously dawned on her. ‘You don’t mean,’ she went on in a lowered voice, ‘that he was meeting his contact? He wasn’t fishing at all?’

‘I don’t know,’ Slider said. ‘The thought occurred to me.’

She thought. ‘No,’ she concluded. ‘If I hadn’t been seasick, what then?’

Atherton answered. ‘There are lots of ways to make sure you were down in the cabin at the right moment.’

Still she shook her head. ‘No, I don’t believe it. He loved that boat, and he loved fishing.’

Do you remember the Dutch boat’s name, by any chance?’ Slider urged gently.

‘Well, as a matter of fact, I do. It was right under my nose, so to speak, when I looked out – it was about all I could see, with it being so close. It was called Havik – or however you pronounce it.’ She spelled it for him. ‘And there was another word underneath, a funny Dutch word beginning with I. Can’t remember what that was. That would be the harbour, wouldn’t it?’

‘Probably,’ Slider said.

‘But you’re quite wrong, you know,’ she went on. ‘Fishing was his passion. Fishing, and me – we were his real life. He kept his job separate, otherwise he wouldn’t have had a life at all.’

‘She probably wasn’t wrong about one thing,’ Slider said. ‘She was his real life. Poor sap didn’t have much else.’

‘I’m trying to figure out what he saw in her,’ Atherton said. ‘I suppose she was a bit of a rest cure after Amanda Sturgess. And with slightly more brain than the jiggling jugheads.’

‘She loved him,’ Slider said. ‘That was her attraction. She didn’t see him as an investment or a means to social advancement or a meal ticket. She just loved him – enough to remain secret and be grateful for seeing him once or twice a week.’

‘Hmph,’ said Atherton. ‘So did Aude and Fraser.’

‘That wasn’t love, that was delusion.’

‘My point exactly.’

‘No, I think there was more to this one. She said they came from the same background. Maybe he was reverting to the safety of his childhood.’

‘You mean she reminded him of his mum? That I can believe.’

Slider wouldn’t be baited. ‘And she was a nurse and he was a doctor. They’d have had plenty to talk about.’

‘Hmph again,’ said Atherton. ‘And what about this boat being called the Windhover? Was it a joke on Rogers’s part, to name the boat after his paymasters? What is a windhover anyway? Sounds like a helicopter.’

‘Country name for a kestrel.’

‘Trust you to know that.’

‘What are you so crabby about?’

‘I hate this woman being taken for a mug. Secret agent indeed! What kind of a chat-up line is that?’

‘You’re just annoyed you didn’t think of it first.’

Atherton’s face split in a reluctant grin. ‘At least with me it would be a credible story. So, harbour next?’

‘Harbour next. And keep your eyes peeled.’

There was no sign of anyone watching the house, or them. Slider was fairly confident that whoever ‘they’ were, they had not yet caught up with the secret wife. Or, if they knew about her, they didn’t think her dangerous, otherwise they’d have done her at the same time as Rogers. But he’d cautioned her to extra vigilance and warned her to speak to no one about David, and to ring him immediately if anyone tried to contact her.

‘And what happens next?’ she had asked him, looking utterly flattened, lost and doleful again, now that the stimulation of telling her story was over.

‘We continue to investigate, until we find who did this and why. And take them into custody. At that point I will let you know, and then we’ll be able to release the body to you for burial and you’ll be able to file for probate of his will. Until then, you must just be patient and keep your head down.’

‘I’ve been doing that for years,’ she said. ‘A few days longer won’t make any difference.’

‘A few days’ was a nice piece of optimism, or trust in their prowess. Slider hadn’t liked to mention at that point that if Rogers’s money was ill-gotten, she wouldn’t be getten it. At least she had the house – and how wise he had been to put that in her name straight away.

Southwold’s harbour was a modest affair, lying to the south of the town on the River Blyth, stretching from the river’s mouth nearly a mile upstream, but catering only for fishing boats, yachts and small pleasure craft. Those yearning for the delights and conveniences of a marina had to go further up the coast to Lowestoft, where there was every facility, including the Royal Norfolk and Suffolk Yacht Club in its grand white Edwardian clubhouse, looking like a cross between the Hotel Del Coronado and a vicarage conservatory.

The only facilities for yachtsmen in Southwold were the Harbour Inn, and upstream of it the clubhouse of the Southwold Yacht Club, which by contrast looked like a village cricket pavilion. The tie-ups were to rings in the harbour wall or rickety wooden jetties, and it was a brisk walk of a mile or so into the town for shops. The road along the harbour front wasn’t even paved, but a spring-busting melange of ruts, potholes and jutting lumps of concrete.

‘Now why would he choose this place, rather than a proper marina?’ Atherton wondered as they picked their way past the puddles. It was too early in the season for the place to be seething with tourists, but there were a fair few Sunday visitors, idling along sucking ice-creams, and buying fish from the tar-paper huts that lined the road.

‘Anonymity,’ Slider said. ‘He’d have thought he could slip in and out of here with much less scrutiny.’

‘Could he?’

‘Yes and no. Not much official scrutiny, that’s for sure. But a lot of prying unofficial eyes. In a place like this everyone tends to know everyone else’s business. On the other hand, they don’t tend to interfere in it.’