Lorna would still be dead.
Murdered.
By her husband?
Or suicide?
The electrician would most probably discover her. And then?
Had he covered his tracks well enough? Enough to put Corin in the frame rather than himself?
Could he ever really get away with this? Or live with himself?
He shone the beam all around the bathroom again. Above him, very faintly, he could hear laughter. Some television show. He went back into the living room. What had he forgotten? Missed? What would a crime scene investigator find? A smart detective?
What damned trace?
It was on the wall, right in front of him. He couldn’t believe it. Could not believe he had been so careless, so stupid. Where had he parked his damned brain?
They’d always had two photographs of themselves in here. One he had taken and disposed of, the framed one of them at Wolstonbury, which had been standing on the table. The other hung on the wall, a selfie Lorna had taken at the beauty spot near Eastbourne, Beachy Head. They stood close together, his arm round her, both grinning, with the English Channel behind them.
The thought flashed through his mind that Beachy Head was the country’s most popular suicide destination. A sheer drop of over five hundred feet onto rocks. That was one option right at this moment. He could be there in half an hour.
Maybe that’s what he should do. Just bloody end it.
As long as he had everything covered, so his wife and daughter would never have to endure the shame. The shame of knowing what he had done.
He pulled the photograph off the wall and tucked it inside his jacket. Reaching the door, he placed the carrier bag on the floor, as if it was waiting to be taken to the dustbin. Then he hurried downstairs.
As he stepped out of the entrance porch and onto the pavement, he kept his head down. Glancing quickly around, he couldn’t see anyone.
But the man standing invisibly in his own shadow on the far side of the road could see him.
Not that he really cared now if anyone did see him. In an hour he could be dead.
All the same, as he headed towards his car, he emptied the cigarette butts from his pocket and tossed them onto the pavement. I’m a naughty litter lout, he thought.
But sod it.
One hour.
One hour and he might be out of here. Gone.
He’d be litter himself.
20
Wednesday 20 April
The words of a poem he had once read went round in his brain, like a needle stuck in a vinyl groove. He was trying to remember who wrote it, as he drove along the narrow, winding black ribbon of road leading up to Beachy Head. To his left, invisible now in the dark, was a vast open landscape of South Downs farmland, and to his right a short expanse of grass and then the sheer cliff edge, with sky beyond. And sea below.
The Seven Sisters. A series of cliffs rising sheer out of the English Channel. It was a long drop almost anywhere along it, but the highest point was Beachy Head. Certain death. Tried and tested. So long as you went off in the right place.
He’d never been good with heights, but they fascinated him. Often as a boy he’d lean over railings and peer down, wondering what the falling sensation would be like. Would you be liberated knowing that in moments, at the end of your fall, there would be nothing any more? No you. Gone.
Was it going to hurt, your very last moment?
He was wondering that now.
Wondering if it would hurt, and trying to think who had written that damned poem.
Strange, he thought, as his headlights picked up the movement of sheep over to his left, he had a few times in the past joked with friends about what each of them would do if given just twenty-four hours to live. Sex, food and booze always featured heavily in everyone’s answer. But now that he had just minutes, he wasn’t thinking about any of those things. He was trying to remember the name of a damned poet, and wondering if death would hurt.
Would it be instant? Or would he lie there on the rocks, his bones all smashed to pieces, but conscious for seconds, minutes, maybe hours, while his life ebbed away?
And still trying to think of the name of the poet.
It didn’t matter. He felt calm. He couldn’t remember ever feeling this calm in his life. All that had happened this evening had receded into a hazy past. His family had too. Everything seemed so very simple, as if he had taken some kind of a happy pill.
Who wrote that poem?
Not that it mattered; not that anything would matter in a few minutes’ time, ever again. Not to him.
The road signs flashed past. Five miles... Two miles... Then soon after he saw ahead of him the illuminated sign of the Beachy Head Hotel.
It might have been a hotel once, but these days the long, low building was just a pub and restaurant, serving drinks and food to visitors at this famous beauty spot, and the hikers walking the South Downs Way. But to his relief there weren’t many hikers — or visitors — to this desolate, windy, rain-swept spot, twenty miles east of Brighton, at 11 p.m. on a Wednesday night in April. In fact, judging from the empty car park, there did not appear to be any at all.
He drove into a bay, careful to align his car between two white lines. Why, he wasn’t sure. Probably because he had a naturally tidy mind, he thought. He didn’t like the idea of his car being reported to the police tomorrow morning. Badly parked, straddled two bays, selfish bastard.
As he killed the engine the dashboard lights went off. He sat there in the darkness, feeling the elements rocking the car. Oblivion was just a few hundred windy, salty, rain-lashed yards away.
So easy.
The woods are lovely, dark and deep.
Who wrote it? Who? Come on, come on, I won’t bite!
He was momentarily startled by headlights looming out of the darkness behind him. Then he heard the sound of a car passing at speed, and his calm returned.
I am doing the right thing.
There was no other realistic option.
I’m a murderer.
Are you?
No. Of course not.
Someone had gone in there, during the time I was out walking around. That was the killer. I could never have killed anyone, could I?
All kinds of memories tugged at him, but he ignored them. Just step over the edge in the right place — and he knew more or less where that was — and then...
Nothing.
The stuff that was there before existence began, would still be there after it ended.
The void would always win. It just played a waiting game, that was all.
He debated for some moments whether to phone his wife. Confess. Tell her what he was about to do — the decent thing.
But he couldn’t face that.
He could send her a note. And say what? He pulled his phone out and began writing a text.
Darling, a situation has happened. I
He stopped. Deleted it. There wasn’t anything he could think of that would make any sense. Instead, opening the car door, he climbed out. Instantly he felt the force of the wind making it hard to stand still, and the rain, hard as shotgun pellets, against his face. Pressing the key fob, he locked the doors. Not that he would care whether the car was stolen or not.
Goodbye, cruel world.
Getting drenched — but who cared? — he walked up the steep incline, guided by the beam of light from his phone, then crossed the road. Over to his left some lights in the Beachy Head Hotel were on. Perhaps it was still open? He was tempted to walk over to the place, have a pint, maybe two, maybe three — and some whisky chasers. To give him courage.