It had been going on for six months since the tarmac crew had relaid the drive, and the details of how it began were commonplace. A school full of girls; Dave with an eye for the most likely; she flattered by his obvious admiration, more so when the other girls noticed he only had eyes for her; a wistful regret when the tarmac was done and the crew departed; followed by an apparently chance meeting when she was walking alone; he, streetwise and twenty-eight; she, a lonely seventeen-year-old with dreams of romance. He respected her, he loved her, he'd wait forever for her, but (how big a word "but" was in people's lives, thought Cooper) he had her in the back of his transit within a week. If she could forget the squalor of a blanket on a tarpaulin, then she could remember the fun and the excitement. She had crept out of a downstairs window at two o'clock in the morning to be enveloped in her lover's arms. They had smoked and drunk and talked by candlelight in the privacy of the parked van and, yes, all right, he wasn't particularly well educated or even very articulate, but that didn't matter. And if what happened afterwards had not been part of her gameplan, then that didn't matter either because, when it came to it (her eyes belied the words) she had wanted sex as much as he had.
Cooper longed to ask her, why? Why she valued herself so cheaply? Why she was the only girl in the school who fell for it? Why she would want a relationship with an illiterate labourer? Why, ultimately, she was so gullible as to imagine that he wanted anything more than free sex with a clean virgin? He didn't ask, of course. He wasn't so cruel.
The affair might have ended there had she not met him by sheer mischance (Cooper's interpretation, not hers) one day during the holidays. She had heard nothing from him since the night in the van, and hope had given way to depression. She was spending Easter with her grandmother at Fontwell (she usually went to Fontwell, she told Cooper, because she got on better with her grandmother), and caught the bus to Bournemouth to go shopping. And suddenly there was Dave, and he was so pleased to see her, but angry, too, because she hadn't answered his letter. (Sourly, Cooper imagined the touching scene. What letter? Why, the one that had got lost in the post, of course.) After which they had fallen into each other's arms in the back of the Ford, before Dave had driven her home and realized (Cooper reading between the lines again) that Ruth might be good for a little more than a quick tumble on a blanket when he felt horny.
"He took me everywhere that holidays. It was wonderful. The best time I've ever had." But she spoke the words flatly, as if even the memory lacked sparkle.
She was too canny to tell her grandmother what she was doing-even in her wildest dreams she didn't think Mathilda would approve of Dave-so, instead, like a two-timing spouse, she invented excuses for her absences.
"And your grandmother believed you?"
"I think her arthritis was really bad about then. I used to say I was going somewhere, but in the evening she'd have forgotten where."
"Did Dave take you to his home?"
"Once. I didn't like it much."
"Did he suggest you steal from your grandmother? Or was that your idea?"
"It wasn't like that," she said unhappily. "We ran out of money, so I borrowed some from her bag one day."
"And couldn't pay it back?"
"No." She fell silent.
"What did you do?"
"There was so much stuff there. Jewellery. Ornaments. Bits of silver. She didn't even like most of it. And she was so mean. She could have given me a better allowance, but she never did."
"So you stole her things and Dave sold them."
She didn't answer.
"What happened to Dave's job with the tarmac crew?"
"No work." She shrugged. "It's not his fault. He'd work if he could."
Did she really believe that? "So you went on stealing from your grandmother through the summer term and the summer holidays?"
"It wasn't stealing. I was going to get it anyway."
Dave had indoctrinated her well-or was this Ruth herself speaking? "Except that you didn't."
"The doctor's no right to it. She's not even related."
"Dave's address, please, Miss Lascelles."
"I can't," she said with genuine fear. "He'll kill me."
He was out of patience with her. "Well, let's face it, it won't be much of a loss whichever way you look at it. Your mother won't grieve for you, and to the rest of society you'll be a statistic. Just another young girl who allowed a man to use and abuse her." He shook his head contemptuously. "I think the most depressing aspect of it all is how much money has been wasted on your education." He looked around the room. "My kids would have given their eye-teeth to have had your opportunities, but then they're a good deal brighter than you, of course." He waited for a moment then shut his notebook and stood up with a sigh. "You're forcing me to do it the hard way, through your headmistress."
Ruth hugged herself again. "She doesn't know anything. How could she?"
"She'll know the name of the firm that was employed to do the drive. I'll track him down that way."
She wiped her damp nose on her sleeve. "But, you don't understand, I have to get to university."
"Why?" he demanded. "So that you and your boyfriend can have a field day with gullible students? What does he deal in? Drugs?"
Tears flowed freely down her cheeks. "I don't know how else to get away from him. I've told him I'm going to Exeter, but I'm not, I'm trying for universities in the north because they're the farthest away."
Cooper was strangely moved. It occurred to him that this was very likely true. She did see running away as the only option open to her. He wondered what Dave had done to make her so afraid of him. Grown impatient, perhaps, and killed Mrs. Gillespie to hasten Ruth's inheritance? He resumed his seat. "You never knew your father, of course. I suppose it's natural you should have looked for someone to take his place. But university isn't going to solve anything, Miss Lascelles. You may have a term or two of peace before Dave finds you, but no more. How did you plan to keep it a secret? Were you going to tell the school that they were never to reveal which university you'd gone to? Were you going to tell your mother and your friends the same thing? Sooner or later there'd be a plausible telephone call and someone would oblige with the information."
She seemed to shrink in front of his eyes. "Then there's nothing I can do."
He frowned. "You can start by telling me where to find him."
"Are you going to arrest him?"
"For what?"
"Stealing from Granny. You'll have to arrest me, too."
He shrugged. "I'll need to talk to your grandmother's executors about that. They may decide to let sleeping dogs lie."
"Then you're just going to ask him questions about the day Granny died?"
"Yes," he agreed, assuming it was what she wanted to hear.
She shook her head. "He does terrible things to me when he's angry." Her eyes flooded again. "If you don't put him in prison then I can't tell you where to find him. You just don't understand what he's like. He'll punish me."
"How?"
But she shook her head again, more violently. "I can't tell you that."
"You're protected here."
"He said he'd come and make a scene in the middle of the school if I ever did anything he didn't like. They'll expel me."
Cooper was perplexed. "If you're so worried about expulsion, why did you ever go out and meet him in the first place? You'd have been expelled on the spot if you'd been caught doing that."
She twisted her fingers in the hem of her jumper. "I didn't know then how much I wanted to go to university," she whispered.
He nodded. "There's an old saying about that. You never miss the water till the well runs dry." He smiled without hostility. "But all of us take things for granted so you're not alone in that. Try this one: desperate diseases call for desperate remedies. I suggest you make a clean breast of all this to your headmistress, throw yourself on her mercy, so to speak, before she finds out from me or Hughes. She might be sympathetic. You never know."