“Are you in my house?” I asked him.
There was no reply.
“I need to know if you are in my house,” I said again.
Once more, there was no reply.
“Stop playing games with me,” I spoke firmly into the phone. “I am not going through my front door until you tell me where you are.”
“Do as you are told,” he replied. “I’m in charge here, not you. Now, go into your house and get my things.”
“No, I will not,” I said, my heart rate climbing again. “I will not go through my front door only for you to plunge your knife into me the same way you did to my father at Ascot.”
There was a long pause from his end.
“Are you still there?” I asked eventually.
“I’m here,” he said. “How come your name is Talbot and not Grady?”
I suddenly realized he hadn’t known that the man he knew as Alan Grady, the man he had murdered in the Ascot parking lot, had been my father.
“My father’s name was really Talbot, not Grady,” I said.
“Ah,” he said. “Now, that might account for why I have been unable to find out about him.”
He obviously hadn’t traced me through the inquest records because he hadn’t known which records to look at. But he must have known that my father was dead, I thought. The stabbing had been an expert job.
“Are you in my house?” I repeated into the phone.
“If I was in your house, I would have gone to the paint tin and taken what is mine by now.”
Did I believe him? But did I have any choice but to go in anyway?
I pushed the front door open wide with my foot until it turned on its hinges as far as it would go, almost flat against the wall. There was not enough space for him to be hiding behind it.
“Have you got them yet?” he asked, making me jump.
“No,” I replied.
I stepped into the hall. I could hear nothing. I walked quickly down the hall past the cupboard under the stairs and into the kitchen. Everything from the kitchen cabinets was strewn across the floor. I stepped carefully through the mess to the house telephone, but there would be no using it to call the police. The wire had been cut right through. I went into the living room and found the same things had been done to both the phone and the cupboards in there. I had no doubt that the third extension, the one in the bedroom upstairs, would have suffered the same fate, but I still started up the stairs to check. Step three creaked as I stepped on it
I thought I could hear a slight banging.
I stopped to listen.
The faint knocking sound came again, but I wasn’t sure of exactly where from.
“Have you got the stuff?” Kipper said to me through the phone.
“No,” I said. “I’m having a pee.”
“Hurry up.”
I put the phone down to my side and listened once more.
I could definitely hear someone knocking. It was below me.
I rushed back down the stairs and opened the cupboard underneath.
Alice lay there on her side, curled around the vacuum cleaner and with her arms tied behind her back. She was banging her tied-up feet on the floor. A tea-towel gag had been wrapped around her face, so I pulled it down, and she immediately spat out a dirty dishcloth that was in her mouth.
“Ugh,” she said, and was promptly sick on the floor.
“You bastard,” I said into the phone.
Kipper laughed. “Ah, you’ve found my little surprise.” He sounded pleased with himself.
I went back into the kitchen, fetched a pair of scissors and cut through the plastic garden ties that had secured Alice’s wrists and ankles. She sat on the hall floor rubbing where the plastic had dug into her flesh. I put a finger up to my mouth in the universal “be quiet” gesture and pointed at the phone.
“Phone the bloody police,” she shouted, ignoring me.
“I wouldn’t do that, if I were you,” said shifty-eyed Kipper through the phone. “Not if you want to see your wife again.”
“Alice, I can’t,” I said.
“Why the bloody hell not?” she demanded.
“He’s got Sophie,” I said. “And he’s on the other end of this phone.”
“Tell him he’s a fucking piece of shit,” she said with passion, continuing to rub her wrists. I was quite taken aback by her vulgarity. Alice had always been so prim and proper, at least within my hearing.
Kipper had obviously heard what she had said because he laughed again. “Tell her she should be happy to be alive.”
I didn’t bother.
“Now, get my things,” he said, “and go back to your car.”
What was I to do? I had to make him think that I still had them or he would hurt or kill Sophie. And I needed to set up a swap, I thought. That would be a good start, but, so far, I hadn’t actually worked out how to.
But first, I needed something to swap for Sophie. I took a canvas shopping bag off the hook on the back of the kitchen door and started putting things into it. First, the wad of banknotes, the takings from Bangor races, came out of my trouser pocket and into the bag. Next, I took a clear plastic sandwich bag and put ten grains of rice in it from Sophie’s rice jar. Finally, the instruction booklet for the kitchen television, together with the TV remote control, went into the shopping bag as well.
Alice stood in the kitchen doorway, watching me with wide eyes. “What are you doing?” she said. “Call the police.”
I again put my finger to my mouth, and this time she understood. I also held up the cut phone wire, and she nodded.
“OK, I’ve got it all,” I said into the phone.
“Go and get into the car and drive back onto the A46 towards the M40.”
“OK,” I said.
I put my hand over the microphone and spoke to Alice. “I’ve got to go and give this to the man.” I held up the shopping bag. “I’ll come back here with Sophie. Are you OK?”
She nodded again slightly, but I noticed tears on her face. She was clearly very shocked. It’s not every day you get tied up and left in a cupboard under the stairs with a dirty dishcloth rammed into your mouth. Thank goodness.
I stroked her shoulders in reassurance and then went back out to my Volvo with the shopping bag.
“OK,” I said into the phone. “I’m back in the car. I’m going to put the phone back in the hands-free cradle, but it may hang up again.”
“Leave it, then,” he said. “Keep it in your hand.”
I reversed out onto Station Road and retraced my path to the A46.
“OK,” I said, holding the phone to my ear. “I’m now on the A46 going towards the M40.”
I didn’t get stopped for illegal use of a handheld mobile phone. There’s never a policeman about when you want one.
“Leave the A46 and take the A425 towards Warwick,” he said. “Take the third turn on the right, Budbrooke Road. Follow it round to the right. Go to the very end of the road.”
“OK,” I said to him. I still wasn’t sure what I would do when I got there.
I took the A425 and then slowly turned into Budbrooke Road. It was an industrial estate sandwiched between a canal and a railway line. Large, characterless modern blocks built of seamed metal stood on either side of the road. No doubt during the working day this area was busy with people and traffic, but at eight-fifteen on a Monday evening it was completely deserted.
I drove slowly down to the very end of the road and stopped between two of the big soulless buildings. I turned the car around so I was looking back up the road, but my Volvo was the only car about, and I began to wonder if I was in the right place.
“Are you here?” I asked.
“I’m here,” he said.
“Where?”
“Shut up and wait.”
I wondered if he was waiting to see if I’d been followed. I sat there for what seemed like ages, but it was probably only a couple of minutes. I looked all around. If he was watching me, I couldn’t tell where from.