Daley eventually found Sabera on the website of a health centre in Earl’s Court, London. She was using her maiden name, as suspected, and her photograph and a few sketchy details about her qualifications were posted on the site, too.
If she had been trying to cover her tracks, she hadn’t done the best of jobs. But that was par for the course for most runaways. Somewhere along the line they usually had to put their heads above the parapet, usually when they felt it was safe enough, or they got sloppy. That was when they got spotted. On the whole, people didn’t know how to cover their tracks, and the electronic world, in which every contact left a trace, meant it was particularly hard to stay hidden when people like Daley — who was by no means a web wizard — were after them. Nor did people realize they were being followed — it just wasn’t human nature to look over the shoulder — and nor did they realize they were being photographed, even when the guy with the camera was within spitting distance.
Daley fished out his small but powerful state-of-the-art digital camera and switched it on. He was sitting perhaps fifty feet from Sabera and the zoom picked her out a treat, with her head tossed back, sexily revealing the full length of her desirable neck, her hair shimmering like in some sort of shampoo advert on TV, a wonderful, happy smile on her face.
‘That’s gonna get wiped off, soon,’ Daley mumbled as he fiddled with his camera. His job was made easier because a man in another group of people at the restaurant was taking photos of his mates. ‘Always hide in plain sight,’ the PI said to himself as his two snaps and their accompanying flashes simply became part of the background, drawing no attention to him, even though he was sitting alone.
He examined the results on the display, using the zoom to really focus in sharply on Sabera’s face and neck, even down to the unusual pendant on the chain around her long neck. Two good shots. Definitely her. Job done. Seventeen hundred quid in the back pocket — tax-free, of course.
Turning over the photograph Rashid had given him, Daley fished out his mobile phone and called the number scribbled on the back.
There was a bank of flashes from digital cameras, but they meant nothing to Sabera. Her world was focused entirely on Sanjay, with occasional input to the rest of the group just for the sake of sociability. Their eyes constantly locked; they often touched — just a brush of excitement, nothing too obvious, but enough to send shockwaves through each other’s body and ensuring that Sabera inhaled deep, shuddering breaths.
They ate sparingly, picking at the numerous plates of tapas on the table without interest, and sipping their drinks occasionally. Two hours passed as if they were only seconds and then the meal was over. The party started to break up until only Sabera and Sanjay remained.
‘Well,’ he smiled, ‘here we are.’ She thought he was the most handsome, charming man she had ever met. She was reminded of a young, but darker version of Elvis Presley, without the sneer, just a shy smile. She had found herself opening up to him like no one else before and she felt so comfortable in his presence it was just a little bit unnerving. ‘Just the two of us,’ he said.
‘It’s been wonderful.’
‘Yes, but I wish it had just been us, no one else.’
‘Me too.’
‘Maybe next time?’
Sabera put her glass to her lips, eyes playing thoughtfully on him.
‘Would you come back to my place for coffee?’ he asked hesitantly, raising a hand, palm outwards. ‘Nothing more than that, I promise. You can call a taxi from there, or I could walk you home. It’s not too far to yours from there.’ He shrugged.
‘A coffee and nothing more?’ she asked suggestively, arching her dark eyebrows and flashing her eyes at him, knowing that she wanted more than that, much more. This would be the night. ‘How about a walk first?’
‘That would be good. Allow all that food we’ve eaten to digest.’
They laughed. Both had eaten like sparrows.
Leaving the restaurant and turning left on to Victoria Street, they walked slowly towards Westminster Abbey and the Houses of Parliament, crossing Westminster Bridge and turning down by the London Eye on the south bank of the Thames. Their arms were interlinked and their bodies continually bumped together gently. They did not speak much, just enjoyed the leisurely stroll, the pleasant evening … being together.
‘You smell amazing,’ Sanjay told her, almost conversationally. ‘Intoxicating.’ They were re-crossing the Thames on the footbridge leading on to Northumberland Avenue and were about halfway across.
Sabera stopped and squeezed Sanjay’s arm, pulling him round to face her, blood coursing through her veins, suddenly feeling weak and light-headed, her legs hardly able to keep her upright. The cocktail of emotions she was experiencing was incredibly powerful.
‘Hold me,’ she gasped. ‘Kiss me.’
In the end, Sanjay had almost to keep her from falling over following the kiss. Their lips devoured each other, tongues flashing and tasting each other’s teeth and mouths. Never had Sabera been kissed like this — never had a man had his tongue in her mouth, for one thing. In fact, Sanjay was the only man, apart from her husband, she had ever kissed and there was no comparison between the two. Her husband’s mouth had always been hard, cold and closed. It had been like kissing a desktop and his kisses had only ever been a prelude to equally cold and hard sexual intercourse, sometimes rape.
But Sanjay knew how to kiss. He knew how to hold her tight, where to put his hands. She could feel his hardness through the clothing against her belly and she knew she wanted him more desperately than anything, ever.
Their lips parted slowly.
‘I’m a married woman,’ she whispered.
‘I know.’
‘This is a big step for me. It has to be right.’
‘It is right,’ he assured her.
They turned and walked on, unaware of the bulky man fifty metres behind them, camera in hand, watching their every move.
Since leaving her husband, Sabera had kept in irregular touch with various members of her family, making short phone calls, always withholding her number, telling them she was OK, don’t worry, she would be fine. She never allowed herself to get into any lengthy conversations with them for fear of her resolve weakening.
But there had been one almost terrible mistake.
Her sister Najma. Sabera had actually kept in touch with her on a more regular basis than with the others. Sometimes the calls were quite long. She trusted Najma implicitly. They had grown up almost inseparable, Sabera being slightly older, and because of this Sabera had allowed herself to be cajoled into having a meeting with her sister. Just so that Najma could see truly that she was all right, so they could hug each other, have a few tears, then part.
The meeting was to take place on a motorway service area — southbound — near to where the M6 joined the M1, south of Birmingham. Najma had made a solemn promise she would tell no one of the meeting, come alone and make sure she was not followed.
It was planned to take place at noon, giving both women the time to travel from opposite ends of the country.
As it was in the very early days after leaving her husband, Sabera was more suspicious and careful than she later became when she thought everything was fine. She drove up the motorway to the junction above the services, circled the roundabout, then came back down and parked on the outer edge of the services car park one hour before she was due to meet Najma. And she was in a hire car. She made sure she had a good view of the entry slip road, the car park itself and the entrance to the shops and cafes.
It wasn’t that she mistrusted her sister — she didn’t — it was more that she feared the deviousness and influence of her husband.
Better safe than sorry.
As it was she was right to be wary. She had only just parked up and settled low in her seat when Najma drove in to the car park in her Nissan Micra, which Sabera recognized instantly, and pulled up near to the shops. Sabera’s relief at seeing Najma arrive alone was almost palpable, the pleasure of seeing her overwhelming … her hand moved to the door handle and she was about to open it, when something made her hesitate, stay back in the car and sink down low behind the steering wheel. Maybe it was because Najma had never arrived on time for anything, let alone fifty minutes early. A punctual Najma was not the sister Sabera knew, so she waited.