Kathy introduced Brock.‘Look, Mr Ferguson-’
‘Wayne, please.You’re lucky to catch me-it’s St Patrick’s Day. I should be down the pub.’
Kathy thought his joviality exaggerated. ‘Wayne, we thought you could help us get in touch with Michael Grant.’
‘Did you now? What gave you that idea, I wonder?’
‘He’s not staying at your cottage?’
His mouth dropped open, then he frowned and examined the toe of his boot while he thought. ‘Michael needs a bit of peace and quiet right now. He wouldn’t thank me for answering that question.’
‘We’re in much the same boat,’Brock said.‘I’ve been suspended, and Tom Reeves who was helping him will probably be kicked out of the force.We need to talk to each other,see what can be salvaged, if anything.’
‘I felt pretty bad changing my story about seeing those two Roach boys in the Cat that night. I felt I’d let Michael down, and offering him the cottage was the least I could do.’
‘Why not give him a ring and let me talk to him?’
‘No, I can’t do that.’ He saw Brock about to argue and raised his hand.‘I mean, it’s not possible. There’s no phone.’
‘Where is it?’
‘North Wales, in the hills above the Vale of Clwyd. I don’t even know if they got there okay. It’s probably still snowbound.’
‘Can you give me directions?’
Ferguson shrugged and reached for a pad of paper. ‘Sure, I guess it’s okay. It’s not easy to find. I’ll draw a map.’
He and Brock bent over the diagram for a while, discussing A and B road numbers, and Kathy picked up a few placenames- Mold, Ruthin and, more obscurely, Llanbedr Dyffryn Clwyd. It wasn’t a part of the country she knew. ‘When you get to the village you’ll see the church spire on the right and the shop beyond it. Take the next turn on the left, it’s easy to miss, and start to climb the hill, here . . .’
Beyond the window men were working on top of the frame, setting out the metal roof sheeting against a heavy sky.
‘All right, I think I’ve got it,Wayne, thanks.’ Brock straightened, pocketing the map.‘How long will it take to get there?’
‘Four, five hours, depending on the traffic. I wouldn’t try finding it in the dark, not if it’s been snowing.’
They returned to the car and Brock checked his watch.
‘You’re not thinking of going today?’ Kathy asked.
‘No, I don’t think so, and in any case, I think we know most of the story now.’ He told her what Abigail had told him. ‘Victim number three was Michael’s brother,that’s what made it so personal with Roach.But I’d like to hear what else Michael knows about the killing of those three men. There may be something that could still help us, which he couldn’t talk about before without revealing his own story. Maybe at the weekend, I might take a trip up there.’
‘Sounds nice, if the weather holds out.’
At eight that evening,Kathy was curled up on her sofa reading the book that Tom had given her.She was conscious of the rain spattering against the window and debating whether to put on a thicker jumper when her phone rang. It was the duty officer at Scotland Yard. A woman had rung wanting to speak to her. She had seemed distraught. She gave her name as Maureen Reeves.
Kathy rang the number and was answered straight away.‘Yes?’
‘Hello, is that Maureen?’
‘Yes.’
‘I’m Kathy Kolla, Maureen. I understand you were trying to reach me.’
‘Oh, yes, thank you for ringing back.’ She spoke in a hesitant rush, veering between panic and apology.‘I wondered . . . is Tom with you?’
‘No.’
‘Only, he was supposed to collect Amy over two hours ago, and he hasn’t appeared. He’s not answering his phone. It isn’t like him, you see, to forget Amy. He’d have let me know. I was due to go out an hour ago …’
‘I haven’t seen him at all this week, Maureen, or even spoken to him.’
‘Oh …I thought …He’s been so down,you see.What happened, well, it was devastating, wasn’t it? So public and humiliating. I know things haven’t been going well for him during the last couple of years, but I’ve never heard him sound so, well, shell-shocked. I’ve tried the obvious people, but nobody’s heard from him. I’m worried.’
‘Yes.’ Kathy was becoming concerned as she listened. ‘When did you last hear from him?’
‘Yesterday lunchtime, on the phone. He sounded very flat, but he confirmed about tonight. I’d been worried that I couldn’t reach him and he explained he wasn’t answering the phone because the press had his numbers. He wanted to make sure they weren’t hanging around my house. He said he was looking forward to seeing Amy. He’d called once before this week to speak to her. He was worried about what people might be saying to her at school.’
‘All right. Something probably delayed him, Maureen, but I’ll start looking. Tell me who you’ve contacted.’ She jotted down the list of names-mutual friends,several workmates,a doctor.‘Okay, now I’ll give you my mobile number so you can reach me as soon as you hear anything.’
She rang off, pushing down her anxiety, trying to clear her head. She began with the accident and emergency number, and while she waited for a result used her mobile to make calls to everyone she could think of-Nicole, Bren, Dot. By the time she rang Brock she’d had a negative result from A amp;E as well as all the others.
He listened in silence,then said,‘Do you know where he lives?’
‘Kentish Town.’ She told him the address.
‘I think we’d better take a look.’
‘Yes, that’s what I thought.’
‘See you there.’
She was the first to arrive, checking that there were no lights on in the basement flat before she rang the bells of the other flats above and on each side of Tom’s. No one had seen him that day. Brock arrived and they went down into the well, knocked a pane of glass out of the front door and opened it. There was no sign of him, and they began a rapid search, quickly coming up with a string of negatives-the mail unopened,the bed unmade,breakfast plates unwashed,a message pad blank,the absence of a diary or notebook,the answering machine switched off, and no response to dialling 1471 for the number of the last caller. There was no indication that anyone else had been in the flat recently. Then Kathy found the laptop.
She switched it on and checked his email, nothing but junk for two days. Then she tried Recent Applications, and found that the photo album was top of the list. She opened it, then called Brock over. The most recent picture had been taken at one thirty-five p.m. that day, of a smartly dressed young woman hailing a cab. She had jet-black hair and a warm tan complexion.
‘Magdalen Roach,’ Brock murmured.
Kathy clicked back through the album, pictures of Magdalen coming out of the office where she worked, in a bus queue, stepping out of her aunt’s red BMW.
‘He’s been stalking her,’ Kathy said. She felt shocked, catching sight of something private and obsessive, and also sad. It was as if she were being allowed a glimpse into the depth of Tom’s anger and despair at what had been done to him.
Brock asked, ‘Do you think he wants to hurt her, pay her back?’ Kathy found she couldn’t give an answer.
Then she was staring at the next image on the screen, a stream disappearing into the mouth of a concrete tunnel set into a grassy bank.‘Oh no.’
‘What is that?’
‘I think it’s the culvert that runs under the Roach place. Tom found some information on it.’ She told him about the helicopter flight and their conversation afterwards.‘I told him it was a ridiculous idea, and he turned it into a joke.’
The picture had been taken two days earlier, the day after his mauling in the parliamentary committee meeting.