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“You’ve never seen her in a rage. You might think differently if you had.”

“Have you seen her in a rage?”

“No,” he admitted.

“Well, I find it difficult even to imagine that. I accept she’s put on a lot of weight in the last six years but she’s a heavy, stolid type.

It’s highly strung, impatient people who lose their tempers.” She saw his scepticism and laughed.

“I know, I know, amateur psychology of the worst kind. Just two more questions then I’ll leave you in peace. What happened to Gwen and Amber’s clothes?”

“She burnt them in one of those square wire incinerators in the garden.

We retrieved some scraps from the ashes which matched the descriptions that Martin gave of the clothes the two women had been wearing that morning.”

“Why did she do that?”

“To get rid of them, presumably.”

“You didn’t ask her?”

He frowned.

“I’m sure we must have done. I can’t remember now.”

“There’s nothing in her statement about burning clothes.”

He lowered his head in reflection and pressed a thumb and forefinger to his eyelids.

“We asked her why she took their clothes off,” he murmured, ‘and she said they had to be naked or she couldn’t see where to make the cuts through the joints. I think Geof then asked her what she had done with the clothes.”

He fell silent.

“And?”

He looked up and rubbed his jaw pensively.

“I don’t think she gave an answer. If she did, I can’t remember it. I have a feeling the information about the scraps in the incinerator came in the next morning when we made a thorough search of the garden.”

“So you asked her then?”

He shook his head.

“I didn’t, though I suppose Geof may have done. Gwen had a floral nylon overall that had melted over a lump of wool and cotton. We had to peel it apart into its constituent elements but there was enough there that was recognisable. Martin ID’d the bits and so did the neighbour.” He stabbed a finger in the air.

“There were some buttons, too.

Martin recognised those straightaway as being from the dress his wife had been wearing.”

“But didn’t you wonder why Olive took time out to burn the clothes? She could have put them in the suitcases with the bodies and dumped the whole lot in the sea.”

“The incinerator certainly wasn’t burning at five o’clock that night or we’d have noticed it; therefore disposing of the clothes must have been one of the first things she did. She wouldn’t have seen it as taking time out because at that stage she probably still thought dismembering two bodies would be comparatively easy. Look, she was trying to get rid of evidence.

The only reason she panicked and called us in was because her father was coming home. If it had been just the three women living in that house she could have gone through with her plan, and we’d have had the job of trying to identify some bits and pieces of mutilated flesh found floating in the sea off Southampton. She might even have got away with it.”

“I doubt it. The neighbours weren’t stupid. They’d have wondered why Gwen and Amber were missing.”

“True,” he conceded.

“What was the other question?”

“Did Olive’s hands and arms have a lot of scratches on them from her fight with Gwen?”

He shook his head.

“None. She had some bruising but no scratches.”

Roz stared at him.

“Didn’t that strike you as odd? You said Gwen was fighting for her life.”

“She had nothing to scratch with,” he said almost apologetically.

“Her fingernails were bitten to the quick. It was rather pathetic in a woman of her age. All she could do was grip Olive’s wrists to try and keep the knife away. That’s what the bruises were. Deep finger-marks.

We took photographs of them.”

With an abrupt movement Roz squared her papers and dropped them into her briefcase.

“Not much room for doubt then, is there?” she said, picking up her coffee cup.

“None at all. And it wouldn’t have made any difference, you know, if she’d kept her mouth shut or pleaded not guilty. She would still have been convicted. The evidence against her was overwhelming. In the end, even her father had to accept that. I felt quite sorry for him then. He became an old man overnight.”

Roz glanced at the tape, which was still running.

“Was he very fond of her?”

“I don’t know. He was the most undemonstrative person I’ve ever met. I got the impression he wasn’t fond of any of them but’ he shrugged ‘he certainly took Olive’s guilt very badly.”

She drank her coffee.

“Presumably the post-mortem revealed that Amber had had a baby when she was thirteen?”

He nodded.

“Did you pursue that at all? Try and trace the child?”

“We didn’t see the need. It had happened eight years before.

It was hardly likely to have any bearing on the case.” He waited, but she didn’t say anything.

“So? Will you go on with the book?”

“Oh, yes,” she said.

He looked surprised.

“Why?”

“Because there are more inconsistencies now than there were before.”

She held up her fingers and ticked them off point by point.

“Why was she crying so much when she telephoned the police station that the desk sergeant couldn’t understand what she was saying? Why wasn’t she wearing her best dress for London? Why did she burn the clothes?

Why did her father think she was innocent? Why wasn’t he shocked by Gwen and Amber’s deaths? Why did she say she didn’t like Amber? Why didn’t she mention the fight with her mother if she intended to plead guilty? Why were the blows from the rolling pin so comparatively light? Why? Why? Why?” She dropped her hands to the table with a wry smile.

“They may very well be red herrings but I can’t get rid of a gut feeling that there’s something wrong. Ultimately, perhaps, I cannot square your and her solicitor’s conviction that Olive was mad with the assessments of five psychiatrists who all say she’s normal.”

He studied her for some minutes in silence.

“You accused me of assuming her guilt before I knew it for a fact, but you’re doing something rather worse. You’re assuming her innocence in spite of the facts. Supposing you manage to whip up support for her through this book of yours and in view of the way the judicial system is reeling at the moment, that’s not as unlikely as it should be have you no qualms about releasing someone like her back into society?”

“None at all, if she’s innocent.”

“And if she isn’t, but you get her out anyway?”

“Then the law is an ass.”

“All right, if she didn’t do it, who did?”

“Someone she cared about.” She finished her coffee and switched off the tape.

“Anything else just doesn’t make sense.”

She shut the recorder into her briefcase and stood up.

“You’ve been very kind to give up so much of your time. Thank you, and thank you for the lunch.” She held out a hand.

He took it gravely.

“My pleasure, Miss Leigh.” Her fingers, soft and warm in his, moved nervously when he held them too long, and he thought she seemed suddenly rather afraid of him. It was probably for the best. One way and another, she spelt trouble.

She walked to the door.

“Goodbye, Sergeant Hawksley. I hope the business picks up for you.”

He gave a savage smile.

“It will. This is what’s known as a temporary blip, I assure you.”

“Good.” She paused.

“There’s just one last thing. I understand Robert Martin told you he thought the more likely scenario was that Gwen battered Amber, and Olive then killed Gwen trying to defend her sister. Why did you dismiss that possibility?”

“It didn’t hold water. The pathologist established that both throats were cut with the same hand. The size, depth, and angle of the wounds were consistent with one attacker. Gwen wasn’t just fighting for herself, you know, she was fighting for Amber, too. Olive is completely ruthless. You would be very foolish to forget that.” He smiled again but the smile didn’t reach his eyes.