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Challis swung around to follow the progress of the Land Rover. The driver was a shadow behind dark glass and he was accelerating erratically toward the exit gates. Mud-streaked side panels. Mud-obscured rear plates.

CHAPTER EIGHT

'He must've been drunk or something.'

Now that she'd walked twice around her wrecked Cessna and noted the damage, Kitty looked drained suddenly, pupils dilated, features pale, a slight tremble in her hands and voice. She pushed both fists into the pockets of the old suede jacket she wore whenever she flew, and began to bump her upper thigh against the fuselage. Then she jerked into action again, retrieving a film canister from the nose-mounted camera.

'Kitty.'

Challis said it a little sharply, to gain her attention. A gaggle of other pilots and mechanics was converging on them. 'Kitty,' he said, 'do you know who it was?'

She shrank inside her jacket. 'I've no idea.'

'Did you get a clear look at the vehicle or the driver?'

'Not really.'

'Did you recognise the vehicle from anywhere?'

'No.'

'Kitty it seemed deliberate to me. Is there anyone you-'

But then they were surrounded by others, who were full of noise and curiosity, shaking their heads on her behalf. They took over cheerily, wheeling the Cessna around, hooking it to a tractor and towing it off the landing strip before Challis could think to tell them they might have been interfering with a crime scene. But then he thought that it didn't matter. They'd all seen what had happened. He took their names one by one, asking: 'Do you know who it was?'

They all said no.

'Know any reason why someone would want to hurt Kitty?'

'No,' they all said. And echoed Kitty: 'The guy must've been drunk.'

Then Challis led Kitty to the hangar and gestured for her to sit on a packing case next to her workbench. 'Tea? Coffee?'

'Actually, Hal, there's a shoebox full of mini-bar bottles under the sink.'

Challis gave her a brief, lopsided grin and hunted in the damp shadows for the shoebox, which was soft and warped and broke apart as he lifted it out. 'We have scotch, brandy, gin.'

'Brandy. Have one with me.'

'Scotch.'

They drank from the flimsy plastic cups that came with the coffee dispensing machine. The brandy seemed to burn through the tense muscles that had forced Kitty's features into an unbending mask, heightening her colour and giving her back her nerve. Her eyes, dark and enlarged by fatigue, sorrow or fear, flashed a little. 'I could have been killed.'

'Tell me what happened,' Challis said.

'Well, I took Rita for a spin'-Rita, for Rita Hayworth, her long legs and name stencilled on the nose of the Kittyhawk by an American pilot based in Darwin in 1942- 'then came back and loaded film in the Cessna and took off again,' Kitty said. She glanced at him. 'Real estate firm in Red Hill hired me to take some shots.'

Challis nodded. 'Go on.'

'The rest you know. I finished the job, came in to land, and this big…' She looked at him inquiringly.

'It was a Land Rover,' he said.

'Land Rover comes racing in off the entry road and drives straight at me. Hits the undercarriage and part of the fuselage.'

She went motionless and distant. Challis knew to be patient. She was still a little unhinged. 'Kitty' was a curiously apt name for her, although 'Janet' suited her, too. Her movements were slow, economical, almost sleepy-like a cat's-but hinting at barely contained energy. He saw her push both hands back through her hair, tucking the ends behind her ears, and then she blinked in an effort to focus her attention on him again.

'Sorry, Hal, it's starting to get to me. If you don't mind I'd like to ring my husband.'

Then she lifted up both hands and looked at them in wonderment. 'Look, I'm shaking.'

'I'll ring him for you,' Challis said, taking out his mobile phone. 'What's his name?'

'Rex.'

'He'll be at home?'

She nodded. 'He's always at home. He generally likes to stay at home and play the stockmarket on the Internet.' She looked faintly embarrassed, as though a husband should have an out-and-about sort of job. 'I actually taught him to fly, but he's not really interested.'

She was prattling, a sign of rattled nerves, so Challis smiled and gently, firmly, asked for her home phone number and dialled it.

Five rings and then the answering machine, Rex Casement's voice, a clipped English accent: 'You have reached the number for Rex and Janet Casement. You may leave a message after the tone.'

Challis said, 'It's Detective Inspector Challis, Mr Casement. Don't be alarmed, your wife's okay, but there's been an incident here at Waterloo aerodrome and your wife would like you to collect her. Please call me,' he finished, giving his mobile number.

'Not there?' Kitty said.

'No.'

'I bet he was there. He gets on the Net and ignores the phone. After a while he'll play back the message.'

They waited, sipping their drinks. Kitty looked forlorn suddenly, as though aware of her mortality. She glanced up at every noise outside, as if expecting her husband to appear. Challis was about to suggest that he call back and leave a message to say that he would take her home when the mobile phone in Kitty's pocket started to ring.

She snatched it out. 'Yes… Yes, sweetie, I'm all right. No, nothing like that… Yes, but I feel a bit shaken…' She laughed fondly. 'I knew you were on the Net. Sure. I'll be here. Bye.'

She closed the phone. 'He'll come straight here. You needn't hang around, Hal.'

'It's all right.'

She smiled gratefully, but clearly didn't want to talk. Challis sat and glanced around at the hangar as if seeing it for the first time. Spare parts, tools, workbenches, the Dragon Rapide he was restoring, a director's chair with a rotting canvas seat, Kitty's work area with its chewed-looking pinboard, filing cabinet, manila folders leaking letters and receipts, flying regulation books and navigation tables stacked on a shelf. Business cards, aerial photographs and a commercial pilot's licence thumbtacked to the pinboard.

Challis said suddenly, 'Did you owe money to anyone?'

She looked startled, then offended. 'Certainly not.'

'Must have cost you money to set up the business.'

She said coldly, 'I had money of my own.'

Challis said nothing, showed nothing. It was a tactic honed over the years to elicit reactions, but how fair was it in this case? He felt drawn to Kitty. They'd shared hangar space and supported each other with labour time, contacts and companionable small talk at the ends of long afternoons. Companions. But that had shifted during the past hour, almost without his being aware of it. There was the badness with Tessa Kane, and with his wife, complicated by his witnessing what appeared to have been an attempt on Kitty's life. She was shaken, vulnerable, in need of comfort. Yet he was close to bullying her with these questions about enemies and money owed. Where did he stand, exactly? What was he here, now- policeman or friend?

Stupid. She had a husband. She wanted and needed her husband, not an inquisitive cop. A door began to close inside Challis.

He said gently, 'Does your husband have any enemies?'

'Rex sits in his study and trades shares on the Internet and makes a packet from it. So, no, he doesn't.'

But her voice was tinged with neglect, and Challis imagined the lonely hours she might spend in a house with a husband who chose to shut himself away. He decided to drop the matter. He touched her forearm.

'Routine questions,' he assured her. 'Forget I asked. We'll see if we can find the Land Rover and whoever was driving it and with any luck you're right, he was drunk or stoned.'

Her head was bowed. She nodded numbly, and began to tremble. He got to his feet, crossed the grimy patch of concrete, and stood beside her, letting her rest her shoulder against his waist while he placed his hand comfortingly on her head.