It was vast, taking up a good chunk of the garden, eight feet from end to end, curved, with a futuristic design fashioned from stainless steel, brushed aluminium and some black, marbled material, complete with extremely comfortable fold-out stools. It looked more like the bar from one of those hyper-hip London hotels where Tom sometimes met clients for a drink than a device for grilling sausages.
The Giraffe must have walked past twenty times this evening. Tom saw Len Wainwright’s head, craned forward way above the top of the close-boarded fence, bobbing steadily along, up and down, up and down, dying to catch Tom’s eye and get into a natter about the machine. But Tom was in no mood for small talk tonight.
‘What does that do, Daddy?’ Max, pointing at a digital display, shouted above the sound of the music.
Tom set down his glass of rosé wine, then thumbed through the English section of an instruction manual the size of a London phone directory. ‘I think it measures the temperature of the inside of the meat – or whatever you are cooking.’
Max’s mouth opened and shut, as it always did when he was impressed by something. Then he frowned. ‘How does it know that?’
Tom opened a compartment and pointed at a spike. ‘There’s a sensor in the spike; it reads the internal temperature. It’s like a thermometer.’
‘Wow!’ Max’s eyes lit up for a moment, then he was pensive again, and took a few steps back. ‘It is a bit big, isn’t it?’
‘A little,’ Tom said.
‘Mummy said we might be moving, then we’d have a bigger garden, so then it won’t be so big.’
‘Did she?’ Tom said.
‘She said that ’xactly. Will you come and play Truck Racing with me?’
‘I have to start cooking – we’re going to eat soon. Aren’t you hungry?’
Max puckered up his mouth. He always considered any question carefully, even one as basic as this. Tom liked that quality about him; he took it as a sign of his son’s intelligence. So far he didn’t seem to have inherited his mother’s recklessness.
‘Umm. Well, I could be hungry soon, I think.’
‘Do you?’ Tom smiled and stroked the top of his son’s head fondly.
Max ducked away. ‘You’ll muck my hair up!’
‘You reckon?’
He nodded solemnly.
‘Well it looks to me like you have a bird nesting in it.’
Max stared at him even more solemnly. ‘I think you’re drunk!’
Tom looked at him in shock. ‘Drunk? Me?’
‘That’s your third glass of wine.’
‘You’re counting, are you?’
‘They said in school about drinking too much wine.’
Now Tom was even more shocked. Was the nanny state now sending kids home from school to spy on their parents’ drinking habits? ‘Who said that, Max?’
‘It was a woman.’
‘One of your teachers?’
He shook his head. ‘A nothingist.’
Tom smelled sweet barbecue smoke coming from one of his neighbours’ gardens. He was still poring through the manual, trying to find out how to fire up the gas grill. ‘A nothingist?’
‘She was telling us what was good to eat,’ Max replied.
Now Tom got it, or thought he had. ‘You mean a nutritionist?’
After some moments of deep thought, Max nodded. ‘Can’t we have one game of Truck Racing before you cook? Just one teeny game?’
Tom finally located the on-off switch. The instruction manual said to switch the grill on, then leave for twenty minutes. Kellie and Jessica looked well away, dancing to yet another track.
‘One game.’
‘Promise you won’t beat me?’ Max asked.
‘That wouldn’t be a fair game, would it?’ Tom said, following him into the house. ‘Anyhow, I never beat you; you always win.’
Max burst into giggles, and scampered on ahead of his father upstairs to his bedroom. Tom paused in the kitchen to glance at the television, in case the news was on, and to fill his wine glass up – finishing the bottle in the process. Unless Kellie had been helping herself, Max was wrong, he realized. It hadn’t been his third glass, it had been his fourth. And on Monday he intended phoning Max’s headmaster and asking what the hell he thought he was playing at, indoctrinating kids into monitoring their parents’ drinking habits.
But as he climbed the stairs, being careful not to spill any wine, he had something infinitely more important on his mind. He stopped at the top, thinking.
Max called out, ‘You can have any colour you want except green, Daddy. I’m having green. OK?’
‘OK,’ he called back. ‘You’re having green!’
Max won the first race easily. Squatting on the carpet in his son’s bedroom, holding the remote control, Tom could not get his brain to focus on the track. He crashed on the first bend in the second race, then went off again at the next opportunity, scattering tyres and bales of straw. Then he somersaulted into a grandstand.
For the past two hours, since he had seen the photograph of Janie Stretton in the Evening Standard, then seen her again on the Six O’Clock News when he’d got home, his brain had been mush.
He could not just ignore any more what had happened. Yet that email which had trashed his computer showed him this person or these people – whoever – were serious.
Which meant the threat was serious.
Was there really any useful information he could give to the police? All he had seen was a couple of minutes of the young woman being stabbed by a hooded figure. Was there really anything there which could help the police?
Anything worth risking the safety of his family for?
He played the argument over and over. And each time he came to the inescapable conclusion that yes, there might be something that could help the police. Otherwise why would the threats have been made against him?
He needed to discuss it with Kellie, he realized. Would she believe him, that he had innocently stuck the CD into his computer?
And if she was against him going to the police, what then? What would his conscience say to him?
The people he had always admired in his life, the true heroes, past and present, were those men and women who were prepared to confront things that were wrong. To stand up and be counted.
Tom watched Max for some moments, eyes alert, fingers expertly dancing around the controls, his truck hurtling around the track. Outside there was a lull in the music and he heard Jessica laughing gleefully.
Didn’t they also have a say in the matter?
Did he have a right to put their lives in jeopardy over what he believed in? What would his own father have done in this situation?
God, it was at a time like this that he missed his parents so much. If he could have gone to them and asked their advice, how much easier that would have been.
He thought about his father, a decent man who had worked as a sales manager for a German company that manufactured industrial cleaning brushes. A tall, gentle man, and a verger at the local Anglican church, he worshipped every Sunday of his life, and was rewarded by God by having his head chopped off by the tailgate of a milk lorry on the M1 motorway at the age of forty-four.
His father would have given him a Christian perspective, no doubt the responsible citizen view, that Tom should report what he had seen and also the threat. But he had never been able to share his father’s faith in God.
He would ask Kellie, he decided. She had a lot of wisdom. Whatever she said, he would abide by.
32
The clumsily handwritten poster Sellotaped to the glass pane of the door said: brent mackenzie. world-famous clairvoyant. here tonight only! A large fluorescent yellow strip across it read: sorry, sold out!
Outwardly the building did not look that promising. Grace had been expecting a fairly spacious hall, but the Brighton Holistic Centre appeared to occupy nothing grander than a small corner shop, with its exterior painted a rather garish pink.