“I wonder where you are,” slurred Hal’s voice, slack with drink and tiredness.
“I’ve been calling for hours. I’m drunk as a skunk, woman, and it’s your fault. You’re too bloody thin, but what the hell!” He gave a baritone chuckle.
“I’m drowning in shit here, Roz. Me and Olive both. Mad, bad and dangerous to know.” He sighed.
“From East to western md, no jewel is like Rosalind. Who are you, anyway? Nemesis? You lied, you know.
You said you’d leave me in peace.” There was the sound of a crash.
“Jesus” he roared into the telephone.
“I’ve dropped the bloody bottle.” The line was cut abruptly.
Roz wondered if her grin looked as idiotic as it felt. She switched the answer phone back to automatic and went to bed.
She fell asleep almost immediately.
The phone rang again at nine o’clock the next morning.
“Roz?” asked his sober, guarded voice.
“Speaking.”
“It’s Hal Hawksley.”
“Hi,” she said cheerfully.
“I didn’t know you knew my number.”
“You gave me your card, remember.”
“Oh, yes. What can I do for you?”
“I tried you yesterday, left a message on your answer phone She smiled into the receiver.
“Sorry,” she told him, ‘the tape’s on the blink. All I got was my ear-drums pierced by high pitched crackling. Has something happened?”
His relief was audible.
“No.” There was a brief pause.
“I just wondered how you got on with the O’Briens.”
“I saw Ma. It cost me fifty quid but it was worth it. Are you busy today or can I come and chew your ear off again? I need a couple of favours: a photograph of Olive’s father and access to her medical records.”
He was happy talking details.
“No chance on the latter,” he told her.
“Olive can demand to see them but you’d have more chance breaking into Parkhurst than breaking into NHS files. I might be able to get hold of a photograph of him, though, if I can persuade Geof Wyatt to take a photocopy of the one on file.”
“What about pictures of Gwen and Amber? Could he get photocopies of them too?”
“Depends how strong your stomach is. The only ones I remember are the post-mortem shots. You’ll have to get on to Martin’s executors if you want pictures of them alive.”
“OK, but I’d still like to see the post-mortem ones if that’s possible.
I won’t try to publish them without the proper authority,” she promised.
“You’d have a job. Police photocopies are usually the worst you’ll ever see. If your publisher can make a decent negative out of them, he probably deserves a medal. I’ll see what I can do. What time will you get here?”
“Early afternoon? There’s someone I need to see first. Could you get me a copy of Olive as well?”
“Probably.” He was silent for a moment.
“High-pitched crackling. Are you sure that’s all you heard?”
TWELVE
Peterson’s Estate Agency in Dawlington High Street maintained a brave front, with glossy photographs turning enticingly in the window and bright lights inviting the punters in. But, like the estate agents in Southampton centre, the recession had taken its toll here, too, and one neat young man presided over four desks in the despondent knowledge that another day would pass without a single house sale. He jerked to his feet with robotic cheerfulness as the door opened, his teeth glittering in a salesman’s smile.
Roz shook her head to avoid raising false hopes.
“I’m sorry,” she said apologetically.
“I haven’t come to buy anything.”
He gave an easy laugh.
“Ah. well. Selling perhaps?”
“Not that either.”
“Very wise.” He pulled out a chair for her.
“It’s still a buyer’s market. You only sell at the moment if you’re desperate to move.” He resumed his chair on the other side of the desk.
“How can I help?”
Roz gave him a card.
“I’m trying to trace some people called Clarke who sold their house through this agency three or four years ago and moved out of the area.
None of their neighbours knows where they went. I was hoping you might be able to tell me.”
He pulled a face.
“Before my time, I’m afraid. What was the address of the house?”
“Number twenty, Leven Road.”
“I could look it up, I suppose. The file will be out the back if it hasn’t been binned.” He looked at the empty desks.
“Unfortunately there’s no one to cover for me at the moment so I won’t be able to do it until this evening. Unless-‘ He glanced at Roz’s card again.
“I see you live in London. Have you ever thought about buying a second property on the south coast, Mrs. Leigh? We have a lot of authors down here. They like to escape to the peace and quiet of the country.”
Her mouth twitched.
“Miss Leigh. And I don’t even own a first property. I live in rented accommodation.”
He spun his chair and pulled out a drawer in the filing cabinet behind him.
“Then let me suggest a mutually beneficial arrangement.” His fingers ran nimbly through the files, selecting a succession of printed pages.
“You read these while I search out that information for you. If a customer comes into the shop, offer them a seat and call for me. Ditto, if the phone rings.” He nodded to a back door.
“I’ll leave that open. Just call “Matt” and I’ll hear you. Fair?”
“I’m happy if you are,” she said, ‘but I’m not planning on buying anything.”
“That’s fine.” He walked across to the door.
“Mind you, there’s one property there that would fit you like a glove.
It’s called Bayview, but don’t be put off by the name. I shan’t be long.”
Roz fingered through the pages reluctantly as if just touching them might induce her to part with her money. He had the soft insidiousness of an insurance salesman. Anyway, she told herself with some amusement, she couldn’t possibly live in a house called Bayview. It conjured up too many images of net curtained guest-houses with beak-nosed landladies in nylon overalls and lacklustre signs saying VACANCIES propped against the downstairs windows.
She came to it finally at the bottom of the pile and the reality, of course, was very different. A small whitewashed coast guard cottage, the last of a group of four, perched on a diff near Swanage on the Isle of Purbeck. Two up, two down.
Unpretentious. Charming. Beside the sea. She looked at the price.
“Well?” asked Matt, returning a few minutes later with a folder under one arm.
“What do you think?”
“Assuming I could afford it, which I can’t, I think I’d freeze to death in the winter from winds lashing in off the sea and be driven mad in the summer by streams of tourists wandering along the coastal path.
According to your blurb it passes only a matter of yards from the fence. And that’s ignoring the fact that I’d be rubbing shoulders with the inhabitants of the other three cottages, day in, day out, plus the frightening prospect of knowing that sooner or later the cliff will slip and take my very expensive cottage with it.”
He chuckled good-humouredly.
“I knew you’d like it. I’d have bought it myself if it wasn’t too far to travel each day. The cottage at the other end has a retired couple in it in their seventies and the two in the middle are weekend cottages. They are situated in the middle of a small headland, well away from the cliff edges, and, frankly, the bricks will crumble long before the foundations do. As for the wind and the tourists, well, it’s to the east of Swanage so it’s sheltered from the prevailing winds, and the sort of tourists who walk that coastal path are not the sort to disturb your peace, simply because there is no public access beside these cottages. The nearest one is four miles away and you don’t get noisy children or drunken lager louts tackling that sort of hike for the fun of it. Which leaves’ his boyish face split into a carefree smile ‘the problem of cost.”