Not a moment before.
69
31 December
‘Just a minute! Just a minute!’ Rachel called out, running down the stairs a little after eight o’clock in the morning. Opening the front door of the cottage she looked dishevelled – and surprised. ‘Oh, hi …’
‘Rachel Pitt …?’
She nodded.
Can I come in?’
Pausing, she looked Nino up and down. ‘Who are you?’
‘Can we talk inside, please? It’s very important.’
She let him in, walking into the tiny sitting room and stoking up the fire. The snow had made the temperatures plunge and although she was warmly dressed she had also wrapped a scarf around her neck. It was dark red, fringed, making her skin translucent, her hands in mittens. Unlike Seraphina, she was tall and athletic, with striking good looks.
As her visitor sat down she watched him, standing by the fireplace to put distance between them.
‘Who are you?’
‘Nino Bergstrom. You don’t know me, but I’m here to help you.’
‘Help me?’ she repeated. ‘I don’t need help.’
‘You do,’ Nino replied, keeping his voice calm. ‘I’ve been trying to find you for days. Your friend Vicky told me where you were—’
She looked blank, almost irritated. ‘I’m sorry, I don’t know what you’re talking about.’
‘I don’t want to scare you—’
Her eyes widened. ‘But you are.’
‘Just hear me out, please. You know about the murders that have been happening lately? The man who’s imitating Angelico Vespucci?’
Now she was listening.
‘I’ve written a play about him.’
‘I know. That’s why I’m here. There have been three murders, and all the women killed had some connection to Vespucci.’ He could see her turn pale, and hurried on. ‘One was connected by a relative, another by copying Vespucci’s portrait, another by writing an article about The Skin Hunter—’
‘What?’ she said hoarsely.
‘And you’ve written a play about him.’
Incredulous, she snapped.
‘So what? I can’t be the only person on earth who’s done that. There must be dozens of people writing about Vespucci, especially now. I don’t see why you had to come up here and frighten the hell out of me—’
‘It’s you that he’s picked.’
The words shook her.
‘How d’you know that?’
‘I’m sorry—’
‘You’re wrong!’ she replied, but her voice caught on the words.
‘I wish I was. But I’m not. He’s after you.’
‘Really?’ she said, trying to compose herself. ‘Have you got any evidence?’
‘I’ve seen photographs of you in his possession. I’ve seen your name on a list.’
She flinched. ‘What?’
‘I’ve been after this man for weeks. Police in Italy, Japan and London are after him too, but every time he’s got away. I’ve only just found out who he is—’
‘So catch him!’
‘I’m trying to,’ Nino assured her. ‘He’s got a website about Vespucci and he’s trailing the next killing on the first of January.’
He could see her grip the mantelpiece. ‘Jesus … why are you telling me all this?’
‘I have to warn you.’
She was fighting panic. ‘But it’s the thirty-first now!’
‘That’s why I’m here. I’m going to stop him. I swear, he won’t get to you …’
Bewildered, she turned away. The fire was crackling – she could feel its warmth – but it was making no impact on the cold inside her.
‘… I think you know him.’
Turning, she stared at Nino. ‘What?’
‘Have you any enemies? Someone you had an argument with? A man you rejected?’
‘But you said he was coming after me because of Vespucci—’
‘He is. But he must know of you, or what you were doing, because your play hasn’t been performed yet.’ Nino paused, then continued. ‘I was thinking about it all the time I was driving up here last night. The killer could have found out about the first victim’s connection through a relative – that would be easy. He could have found out about the portrait copy. It was for an exhibition, after all. Likewise, the article. That was published on the internet. But your play? Hardly anyone knows about that – apart from the people at the theatre.’
She shook her head. ‘Not even them. Only Enright knows about it there, and he’s no killer.’
‘You must have told someone else,’ Nino persisted. ‘Think, Rachel. Who did you talk to?’
‘Michael, the man in my life …’ She trailed off, thinking of her lover. ‘No, it wouldn’t be him. I’ve known him for years. Not him.’
‘So, who else? What about friends? You must have told a friend about it?’
‘Not really. I was superstitious. I thought it was bad luck to talk about the play until it was going to be performed. So I kept quiet about it.’ She shivered, rubbing her mittened hands together. Her nails were bloodless.
‘How long have you been working on it?’
‘I had the idea about four years ago. I heard about Angelico Vespucci and thought it would be a good subject.’
‘Where did you hear about him?’
She was getting agitated, her mind wandering. Fear, cold and encroaching, was making its presence felt.
‘I … I … don’t remember … maybe at … I can’t remember!’
‘Take your time.’
‘I don’t have much of that, do I?’ she snapped back, her eyes filling. ‘D’you know why I came up here for the holidays? To get away from London, to get away and clear my head. I made a resolution to end my relationship and move on. Make a new life. And now you’ve come here and told me I don’t have a bloody life left—’
‘You do,’ Nino assured her, ‘if you help me. Come on, Rachel, think. When and where did you first hear about Angelico Vespucci?’
She tossed back her head and focused. ‘I went to university, where I read English. I learned Italian when I worked in Rome for a while. I was a nanny … Then I came back to London and entered the theatre. The Hamlet Theatre …’ She was getting desperate. ‘I can’t remember! I can’t remember how I heard about The Skin Hunter—’
‘A book?’
‘No.’
‘A film?’
‘No!’
‘Did you hear about him at a party? At a dinner?’ Nino pressed her. ‘On a holiday?’
‘A holiday …’
‘What about a holiday?’
‘Wait a minute,’ she said, glancing away and forcing herself to remember. ‘I took a trip five years ago. It was when I was in Italy, and it was a cultural tour of Venice. Some passengers had dropped out and the tickets were really cheap, so I said we’d go.’
‘Who’s we?’
‘I took the kids I was nanny for. They weren’t babies, and I thought it would do them good. Actually, to be honest, I had second thoughts about it as soon as I’d got the tickets. I thought it was going to be a lousy trip, hauling the kids along. But it was a mixed group, and there were some people of my own age. I suppose they grabbed the chance, like I did.’
‘Were they Italian?’
‘Most of them,’ she sighed, trying to remember. ‘We didn’t get close. I was busy with the kids and it was only two days. But there was a group of Italian girls who were flirting all the time and an Englishman who was very reserved.’
Nino heard the word Englishman.
‘Did you get on with him?’
‘No, not really. He asked me out and I said no. He was pissed off about it, but he wasn’t my type.’ She paused, remembering. ‘Oh God …’