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He grunted a yes.

‘On the condition that you talk to me in words of more than one syllable, and don’t frighten the children.’

He turned to face her, a look of puzzlement on his face. ‘Is it that obvious? Sorry.’

‘What’s the matter, David? No one’s sick or anything, are they?’

‘No, no. It’s the case, that’s all.’

‘But it’s a triumph for you, isn’t it? Everyone says so. Your boss is pleased, isn’t he? And the papers say the timing was perfect, saving everyone’s face over the prison opening.’

‘Yes.’

‘Well then, will you tell me why you’re so unhappy? Not now-at The Plough, when you’ve got a pint in your hand.’

He smiled and put an arm around her shoulders, and they walked back inside.

The principal attraction of The Plough was a menagerie of ancient animals-a horse, some mangy rabbits, a cantankerous goat and two peacocks-for which the landlord’s aged mother had provided refuge in the back garden, possibly as an object lesson to her family on the care of the elderly. While the children renewed their acquaintance with the beasts, Brock and Suzanne took their drinks to a bench in a sunny corner.

‘It’s his body,’ Brock said at last, wiping beer froth from his whiskers. ‘We can’t find Verge’s body.’

Suzanne misunderstood. ‘Yes, that must be upsetting for the family.’

‘No, I don’t mean that. I think…’ He paused, as if hesitating to put his thoughts into words. ‘I think there may not be one. I think the whole thing may be a sham.’

She was startled. ‘Oh… But everyone is so sure. Did you read the interview with the Prince about the opening of the prison?’

‘Yes. As you said, the timing was perfect. That’s one of the things that worries me.’

Suzanne said nothing for a while, thinking. She understood about worriers, never satisfied unless there was some disaster to anticipate. She was a bit of one herself, though she’d never thought of Brock in quite those terms. ‘You really think he might still be alive?’

‘Yes.’

‘But, David…’ She stopped. The notion seemed preposterous. ‘Have you discussed this with the others?’

‘I can’t. The case is closed. I can’t start spreading rumour and doubt. I just hope I’m wrong, that’s all.’

‘You think he’s that devious?’

‘I thought that from the beginning. I had an image of a clever and devious man, evading his pursuers, and everything I learned about him seemed to confirm it. Now we’re asked to believe that he was a helpless victim, duped and murdered by a colleague who struck me as fairly transparent.’

‘You’re not just disappointed that your reading of the situation was wrong?’

‘There’s that, I suppose.’

‘And no one else has had any doubts?’

‘Kathy thought she’d picked up some kind of a trail in Spain, but the suicide and confession of Verge’s partner put an end to it. The problem is, you see, that to explain it the other way, you have to believe that Verge didn’t just act impulsively last May. You have to accept that he was planning the whole thing for a year or more beforehand, setting up companies and milking funds from his own firm, constructing the whole damn story. And more than that, that he’s probably been here all the time, in England, pulling the strings, while we combed the rest of the globe for him. And there’s no motive for it. Why would he do such a thing? He was at the height of his success. Why would he deliberately blow it all away?’

‘Apart from the lack of a body, what else is wrong?’

Brock shrugged with irritation. ‘A confession that doesn’t sound right, a trace at the suicide scene that doesn’t match anything… Nothing definite.’

Suzanne sat back, beginning to understand the scale of Brock’s dilemma. ‘What can you do?’

‘I don’t know.’ He took a deep swallow of beer.

Suzanne sipped her wine thoughtfully. ‘It depends on your reading of Verge, doesn’t it? Whether he really was as cunning and manipulative as you imagine?’

‘Yes. We’ve spoken to all the people close to him, but in the main they think he was a hero.’

‘What about his wife?’

‘She’s dead…’

‘Didn’t he have a first wife? Have you talked to her?’

‘Kathy did. Didn’t get anything. They’d had no contact for almost a decade.’

‘She might have a more informed view of his deviousness. Most divorced women do.’

‘It’s a thought.’ He turned it over in his mind. ‘Yes, it is a thought.’ He took her hand and gave it a squeeze. ‘Thanks.’

‘There’s a price,’ she said. ‘The bar billiards machine was free when we came through. Stewart is looking rather bored with Dobbin and his mates. He’d be thrilled if you offered him a game.’

It was raining heavily on Monday morning when Kathy arrived at Queen Anne’s Gate. The weather matched her mood after a difficult weekend. She had been to see two movies, neither of which she could now remember, and using her only recipe book had cooked herself an elaborate meal, which she had been unable to eat. It hadn’t helped her sense of isolation when Linda Moffat had phoned on Saturday morning to ask if she and Leon would like to make up a foursome to a concert that night. Tony had won some tickets, apparently, and his wife was elsewhere. Kathy had said that they were already committed to something they couldn’t get out of, and had wondered afterwards at her inability to tell the truth. And now she was faced with a whole week chairing the Crime Strategy Working Party.

Bren Gurney appeared from around a corner and gave her a weary grin. There were dark circles under his eyes.

‘Baby keeping you awake?’ she asked. His third girl was now three months old.

‘Yeah. Little bugger.’

‘You love it.’ Then, on impulse, she added, ‘Is Brock about?’

‘Don’t think so. I saw him half an hour ago, but he was heading off somewhere. Not in best of sorts. They sent him a couple of invitations to the opening of Marchdale Prison later this week, and he reckons he has to go. He asked me if I’d go with him, but I’ve got too many other things to do.

I said I’d find somebody. What about you, could you go? It’s on Thursday.’

It sounded like a good excuse to get out of at least one day on the committee. ‘Yes, all right. Listen, maybe you can help with what I wanted to check with him. I haven’t finished writing up my Verge report, and there’s something I’m not sure about. You remember the bit about the missing forensic evidence on the pillow? I was the one who first spotted it, and I just wondered if that was finally cleared up, how it happened and everything.’

‘Sure. Didn’t Leon tell you?’

She began to frame some innocuous lie, then stopped herself. ‘The truth is, we’re not talking at the moment. He’s moved out.’

‘Oh, hell. Sorry about that, Kathy. I thought you two were all set.’

‘Yeah, me too. Apparently not. But it wasn’t his fault it was overlooked the first time, was it?’

‘No, no. The lab ran an internal inquiry into how it happened. They were very pissed off, as you’d expect. But Leon was in the clear.’

‘Right. So it was the other guy’s fault, the other LO?’

‘No, it was a clerk who stuffed up. A part-timer, only there three days a week. No continuity, of course. They got rid of her. The report’s on my desk. Borrow it, if you’re interested.’

‘Great. I might do that. Thanks, Bren.’

‘I’ll tell Dot you’ll go to Marchdale with the boss. She’ll give you the details. Maybe you’d like to come over for a meal, see the baby?’

‘Thanks, Bren. I appreciate it. Maybe when she’s settled down a bit? I wouldn’t want to give Deanne any extra work at the moment.’ The truth was, she didn’t think she could face babies right now.

‘Sure.’ He waved and continued on his way.

The wet Monday morning seemed to have affected the mood of the committee, too. They were fractious and uncooperative, niggling over trivial points. They were supposed to have prepared outline position papers for general discussion on policy relating to their particular areas of interest and expertise, but none of them had. Like recalcitrant schoolchildren, Kathy thought, surveying the sulky expressions around the table. Even Robert seemed sleepy and off-colour, hardly bothering to help her steer their discussions in more positive directions.