Twenty-one
So, I don’t suppose you’d care to tell us the whole story now, would you?” I asked as we drove down the sloping driveway away from the White Mountain Hotel.
Rosalind paused as she reached a junction, pretending a preoccupation with checking for other cars when the darkness would have made it easy to spot them. She was a slow and cautious driver, and I didn’t think that was just down to the conditions.
“What ‘whole story’ is that?” she said, noncommittal.
“You’ve been married to the guy for fifteen years,” I said, “and you were an army brat. You’ve spent most of your life around soldiers. There’s no way Lucas could have kept up the pretense of being ex-SAS for long, Rosalind. Not in front of you.”
In the glow from the car’s instrument lighting I saw her suppress a small smile. A compliment’s a compliment, after all. I was sitting alongside her in the front, with Matt relegated to the rear seat.
“You’re right,” she said. “But I knew he wasn’t who he said he was, long before I married him.”
“So why did you?” It was Matt who asked the question, sounding baffled. “You loved him, right?”
“Love?” Rosalind almost scoffed. Then her voice turned bitter. “Do you have any idea how hard it is for a woman to be in the kind of business I’m in?” she demanded as she pulled away. “After my daddy died I couldn’t get anyone to deal with me on any account. We were going under and there were plenty of my daddy’s so-called friends who were just waiting for that to happen so they could step in and buy up the business for a rock-bottom price.”
We were driving past individually designed houses set close to the shoulder of the road, home lights spilling out brightly across the crystallized snow.
“So he was a figurehead,” I said, almost to myself. “Weren’t you worried someone else might spot him for a fake?”
She shrugged. “The British SAS has a certain reputation and I coached him some,” she said with just a hint of a sneer in her voice. ‘As long as he talked quiet, stared hard, and didn’t blink, people believed he was what he said he was.”
“And he was,” I agreed. “Or the real Lucas was, at any rate, if anyone cared enough to check the records. Speaking of which, did Greg ever tell you what happened to the real Lucas?”
We stopped at a junction and turned left, the road twisting through the trees looming over us, over a small flat bridge with steel barriers at either side.
“He was in the house alone, just Greg and Simone,” she said at last, her voice dull, almost monotone. It took me a moment to realize when she said “Greg” she wasn’t talking about the original.
“Simone was in her room. It was a tiny cottage somewhere in Scotland, he told me, a cheap rental, but they moved around a lot and they couldn’t afford to be fussy. Lucas was searching for them, threatening them, but they’d been there six months and heard nothing. They thought they might be safe. They weren’t.”
“He found them.”
She nodded, slowing again as we reached another junction, each one connecting to a larger road. This one had houses set back farther into the woods, with mailboxes lining the edges of the road.
“Greg said there was a phone call that afternoon, but when he answered there was nobody there, and he knew that they were going to have to run again, and the child was just starting nursery and she was old enough to be making friends and Pam had a job that she enjoyed. And he knew they couldn’t keep doing this forever.”
“So he killed him.”
Rosalind shook her head. “It wasn’t like that,” she said, softly bitter. “He started to gather up a few essentials, waiting for Pam to get home. He heard something upstairs and, when he went up to see, he found Lucas coming out of Simone’s bedroom, carrying the child. She was terrified.”
Rosalind paused again as we made another turn, each junction bringing us onto a larger road, heading towards the middle of North Conway. It was snowing harder now, big flakes that rushed towards the beams of the headlights like distant stars. The luxury of the Range Rover closed out the elements, separating us. We crossed a series of bridges over frozen water, the ice showing a dull gray between the pale snow of the banks.
“So he killed him,” I said again. “How?”
She flicked me a fast glance and the tail of it cracked like a whip. “Lucas attacked him,” she said, dogged, her speech becoming jerky, staccato. “Greg just defended himself, as best he could. Lucas was a trained killer, for God’s sake, and Greg didn’t want Simone to get hurt. They struggled. It was a tiny cottage and there was hardly any room. Lucas tripped, fell down the stairs, and Simone fell with him. She was screaming, but she didn’t have a mark on her. His neck was broken. It was an accident, but what could Greg do?”
“He could have called the police and taken the consequences — if indeed there were consequences,” I said. Self-defense was a plea that was sometimes accepted by the courts, as I had cause to know only too well.
If it was genuine.
“He panicked,” Rosalind said, as though she had a bad taste in her mouth. “He and Lucas were similar enough in looks to pass for each other. He told me he sometimes wondered if that was what Pam saw in him-almost the same face but without the brutality”
“What about the body?” I said. “What happened to that?”
“Apparently, the cottage was pretty isolated,” Rosalind said. “Greg knew there were plenty of places in the Scotch countryside to hide a body where it wouldn’t be found easily”
“So he buried the real Lucas, took the dead man’s identity and scarpered over here,” I said flatly. “That takes some forethought and planning. That’s not just something you can do on the spur of the moment.”
“Lucas had already planned it,” Rosalind said. “Greg said that he found Lucas’s car nearby. In the trunk was a bag, all packed, with his passport and airline tickets already booked for a flight the next day. Greg said he knew that Lucas had come north solely to kill Simone and his ex-wife-his last act before he left the country.”
“I don’t know how he could just walk out and leave Simone-an
infant-on her own in the house, after she’d just witnessed a murder,” Matt said, his voice paled with shock.
“She was young,” Rosalind dismissed, braking for the traffic lights onto the main road now. She indicated right and edged out of the junction, even though it was on red. I still couldn’t get used to the idea that you were allowed to do that over here. “Young enough to forget what she’d seen.”
Blanked it out, more like. The human mind has a way of blanketing trauma, like growing a scab over an open wound. But all it took was a careless nudge and suddenly the scab was off and the wound was bleeding afresh. …
“She remembered, didn’t she?” I said quietly “When Jakes took a tumble down your staircase and broke his neck, Simone remembered.”
We were on the main street now, heading east, passing the Eastern Slope Inn and the old-fashioned Zeb’s General Store, draped with lights that spoke of Christmas celebrations overrunning. I’d never felt less like celebrating anything.
“It was all my fault,” Rosalind said quietly then. “Greg didn’t tell me about the DNA test. I didn’t want them to take it. I thought it would ruin everything. Greg never told me Lucas’s daughter really was his, after all,” she muttered, almost to herself. “He should have told me!”
I glanced across and found her face was filled with sorrow. I remembered her words that day at the house when we’d talked about her childless marriage. It was never to be, she’d said, wistful. Her grief now was not caused by her husband’s sins of omission, I realized, but by her own. It was not the fact that the man she’d called Greg Lucas really did turn out to have a child. It was the fact that she did not.