After a shrewd glance at his hand she reached across to the first-aid box. ‘Jane,’ she called back over her shoulder, ‘answer that phone, please!’
Whoever the caller was, he was persistent. Patient, too. Jane picked up the receiver. It was one of those cultured voices which give the impression that their owners would be equally incapable of either panic or passion. Not the sort she could visualise in a room full of hungry jellyfish.
‘This is the Ministry of the Environment speaking,’ he purred in her ear. He asked if he could possibly speak to Jocelyn.
‘Of course. She’s not busy.’ Jane didn’t even bother to put her hand over the mouthpiece. ‘Joss — for you!’
The following morning Jane set out in good time for her drive to Totnes, aiming to arrive not later than eleven. She preferred to do her nosing around before the interview, just in case things went wrong. The thought nagged at her also that Sue might have phoned Tim and mentioned the appointment, although she’d tried to forestall this danger by calling herself Jo, not Jane. But Tim might easily put two and two together.
Her main problem was, she recognised as she pulled out into the fast lane to overtake a lorry, that she still doubted if she was tough enough to go through with it.
Towards Tim she was behaving like a first-class bitch. She’d said as much to Jocelyn as they’d sat having a drink together the previous evening. Robin was in bed by then. The numbness in his hand was already beginning to thaw and the doctor had given him a pain-killer, advising rest.
‘A real bitch,’ she’d said.
‘Then why do it, whatever it is?’
‘It’s a job. A bloody important one. Oh, it’s journalism… Very few break through to the big time. The others spend their lives wondering why they never did. I’ve known too many of them. You see what I mean, Joss, don’t you?’
‘No, I don’t,’ her sister said bluntly. ‘Not if you won’t tell me what you’re up to.’
‘No way. You’d try to stop me.’
‘Isn’t that what you want? Aren’t you just waiting for someone to stop you? That’s what all this is about, if you’re honest.’
Jane shook her head. She wrapped both hands around her glass and stared into it. ‘No, I’m not sure you would understand. You have to walk over people’s faces sometimes. Not you, perhaps — but in my trade you do.’
‘Oh, in universities it happens all the time!’ Jocelyn laughed. ‘I keep out of it.’
‘I’ve never really had to do it before, not this way. But when I think of Bill…’
She fell silent. That was a mistake — she’d not intended to mention him.
‘Who is Bill?’ Jocelyn asked.
Naturally.
So she’d told Jocelyn about Bill. Everything, more or less. What sort of person he was. The way he’d been torn between her and loyalty to his family. His feelings of guilt towards his wife. It was the first time she’d really been able to unburden herself, and it made her feel a bit better. Not much, though.
‘You always get yourself into such a mess,’ Jocelyn commented when she’d finished. ‘I suppose I don’t always understand. I live here in this backwater, doing work that interests me…’
Jane had laughed: ‘Jellyfish?’
‘Yes, even that.’ Jocelyn had unwound herself from the hard Windsor armchair to fetch a half-finished box of chocolates from the dresser. ‘D’you realise, by the end of all this we’ll really have extended our knowledge of the digestive system of the jellyfish? I’ll be able to publish a paper.’
‘If we live that long.’
Jane went over the conversation again in her mind as she left the motorway. It had done them both good to let their hair down a bit. As children, Jocelyn had always been the big sister — seven years older, which was quite a gap. Now, she felt, they were beginning to know each other at last.
There was comparatively little traffic on the road that morning. No tourist coaches at all, which was just as well. Big signboards along the verges warned drivers to stay well clear of all coastal areas. JELLYFISH HAZARD! The letters screamed out at her. Teignmouth, Torquay and several other towns were forbidden to everyone except residents. According to the local radio DJ, many had packed up and moved inland. There had been the inevitable looting, with an announcement from the police to make sure that all doors and windows were securely fastened.
Yet apart from yet another warning sign at the crossroade, Totnes itself looked quite peaceful and normal. She came upon the recently-built theatre just beyond the old church but drove on to leave the Mini in a small car park to the rear of some cottages. Her first task was to check out the address. The bijou public library had a street guide from which she discovered that the road was only a couple of hundred yards away.
The whole place was so small, it was impossible to get lost. Stepping off the narrow pavement she just missed being knocked down by a couple of cyclists careering past. Obvious holidaymakers to judge from their gear: rucksacks, the briefest of shorts, drooping handlebars and muzzled pedals. It was all so peaceful here, she thought; yet only six miles away some of the most popular holiday beaches in the country were cordoned off because of the jellyfish menace.
As one Torquay resident had said on television only the previous day, jellyfish lay bivouacked along the entire length of the sands like an army waiting to move.
Not here, though. Jane paused on the little stone bridge to gaze down at the bubbling River Dart. It looked so pure, she was tempted to jump in and drink. Down on its banks the two cyclists had dismounted and were slipping off their rucksacks as if about to picnic. A boy and girl, probably about her own age. They both wore glasses, and in identical frames.
Time to get on, she thought.
She went first past the theatre which was plastered with posters announcing their forthcoming production of Much Ado About Nothing. Sue was playing Beatrice, she noticed. That was useful. And the only Mark in the list was to take the part of Antonio. Hunting around the side of the building she came to a showcase containing photographs of previous productions that season and found the same Mark playing opposite Sue in an Agatha Christie piece.
Her next port of call was the flat which she found in a row of squat Victorian houses. The bell-push bore the legend, hand-printed on a scrap of paper and inserted slantwise under the plastic cover, Top flat: Mark and Sue. And that was all. No surnames to help the postman.
Jane pressed the other bell, which was unidentified. After a while the door was opened by a friendly-looking middle-aged woman with wispy hair. She wiped her hands on her apron.
‘You caught me washing my curtains,’ she said.
‘Mrs Barnes?’ Jane noted the wedding ring. She had checked the address in the electoral register at the public library and found Barnes was the only name recorded. ‘I’m told you let flats?’
‘Just the one upstairs, but I’m afraid that’s taken. For the time being at any rate. Actors, you know. They always move on.’
‘I’d not need it immediately,’ Jane pleaded. ‘I’m taking a job in Torquay, but I’d rather live outside.’
‘Can’t say that I blame you,’ Mrs Barnes said sympathetically. ‘Even when they get rid of those jellyfish, I’ll never feel safe there again. About the flat, I’m not saying it’s impossible, mind. In a couple of months, like.’
‘I couldn’t see it, could I?’
‘Well, they’re not in at the moment, and I never like to go behind people’s backs.’
‘But it is just the one bedroom?’
‘Bedroom, sitting-room, kitchen and bathroom. Your own meters.’