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George Todd’s yellow motorbike was spotted early that afternoon, twenty-four hours after he had disappeared, parked outside a small holiday hotel in Bexhill, the place where Charles Verge had supposedly walked into the sea. Todd had apparently booked into the hotel the previous evening. Within half an hour he had been located in a pub less than a hundred yards away, and begun the journey back to London under escort.

Now he sat on the other side of the table, painstakingly rubbing his fingertips with a handkerchief. Brock could see no remaining traces of the ink, but still he rubbed and scoured.

‘I thought you scanned them electronically now,’ Todd said softly. ‘What’s the point, anyway? Did you think I were someone else?’ A Yorkshire accent. He looked up from his scrubbing with a glint in his eye, as if relishing some private joke. ‘Who did you reckon I was then, Charles Verge?’

Brock said nothing. The idea did seem far-fetched now, a clutching at straws.

It was hard not to stare at Todd. There was a fastidious intensity about his gestures, which contrasted oddly with the anarchy of his damaged features. Brock noted the creases down the arms of his shirt, the way he folded the handkerchief neatly before replacing it in his pocket. The crew that had searched his toolshed at Orchard Cottage had commented on how obsessively neat everything was, like in his rented room. Brock had seen it before, the model prisoners who responded to the order and discipline of prison that had been so absent from their early lives. More than one of the assessors in Todd’s file had diagnosed an obsessive-compulsive personality disorder.

‘What were you doing at Bexhill?’

‘I wanted a few days’ holiday. Decided to go down to the seaside.’

‘To the place where Charles Verge was supposed to have disappeared.’

Another private smirk. ‘Seemed as good a place as any.’

‘When did you first meet Mr Verge?’

‘Two, two and a half years ago.’

‘That was at…’ Brock consulted his notes.

‘HMP Maidstone. He was doing research.’

‘How did he come to meet you?’

‘I was picked, by the governor, to talk to him about my experiences. We hit it off. I was able to put him right on a few things.’

Brock wondered if the two men had recognised something of themselves in the other. ‘What sort of things?’

‘He was interested in how people feel when they’re inside, how their attitudes change over time, what makes them tick. Then later on, when he was working on his plans, we talked about them. I helped him design March-dale.’ The claim was made flatly, without bombast.

‘Did he pay you for your help?’

‘He insisted. He called me a consultant, and put money into an account for me, for when I got out. Don’t worry, it were all declared. I paid tax on it.’

‘And you got out last January? What did you do then?’

‘He invited me to work for his family, as a general handyman and gardener. I got Orchard Cottage ready for Miss Charlotte, painting and wallpapering and repairs, and I do the gardens and other odds and ends for her, and for Mrs Madelaine Verge and Ms Diaz at Briar Hill. Ask them. I’m a good worker.’

Brock didn’t doubt it, and moved on to Todd’s whereabouts at the time of Kathy’s car break-in and Clarke’s suicide. He had been working in Charlotte’s garden at the time of the first, he said, though whether she or her grandmother had seen him there all afternoon he couldn’t say. As for the second, he thought he had been at home that evening, probably watching TV, but he couldn’t be sure. The absence of a firm alibi didn’t encourage Brock. None of the teams had found a pair of black gloves, or anything else incriminating.

It was six p.m. before Kathy returned to Queen Anne’s Gate from her committee meeting. She passed Brock on the front steps. Clearly he was in a hurry, buttoning his coat against the chill with one hand, the other clutching a briefcase, a preoccupied frown on his face. He grunted hello, unsmiling, and marched off down the street in the direction of headquarters.

Bren was inside in the lobby, consulting the appointments book.

‘What’s up with the boss?’ Kathy asked.

‘Shit and fan have connected, Kathy. Phones have been melting, explanations demanded.’

‘The searches?’

Bren nodded gloomily. ‘Not a thing. No black leather gloves, no hidden messages, not even a trace of an illicit substance in Todd’s medicine cabinet. You heard we found him, did you? Sitting in a pub at Bexhill having a quiet beer. Said he was having a seaside break.’

‘Really?’ Kathy was stunned, and realised how convinced she had become that Todd and Verge were the same man.

‘And he’s definitely who he says he is?’

‘Sure. We took his prints and DNA, and had his parole officer in.’

‘Does he have an alibi for the times on the fourteenth and seventeenth?’

‘Convincingly vague. He runs a motorbike, by the way. Yellow Honda, with a black crash helmet. You don’t remember seeing it in the supermarket car park, do you?’

Kathy thought. ‘Sorry, no. And the women have complained?’

‘Long and loud, in person and through legal representatives, and to higher authorities. Brock’s just been called in to see Sharpe. Hell, it isn’t as if we couldn’t have seen it coming. What was in his mind, do you know, Kathy? It was almost as if he believed that Charles Verge was still alive.’

Kathy shook her head.

‘I can just hear Sharpe telling him he’s being obsessive. And it’s true. Well, isn’t it?’

‘I don’t know, Bren. I really don’t.’

‘And how certain is this match of the leather fibres?’ Sharpe demanded.

‘Ninety-seven per cent,’ Brock replied.

‘Ninety-seven per cent certain of what?’ Sharpe insisted. ‘That they’re from the same glove, or from the same type of glove, or from a similar piece of black leather?’

‘A piece of leather processed in the same way, using the same dye.’

‘And that covers what percentage of the total number of leather items on sale in London?’

‘I don’t know.’

‘There could be hundreds of matches for these samples, yes? Thousands maybe. One might be from a bag and the other from a glove, or the sleeve of a jacket, or a shoe. You see my point?’

‘Yes, sir.’

‘And you must have realised this, yet you persisted. Why?’

‘I said when we met a week ago that I felt it was premature to close the investigation, sir, especially in the absence of a body.’

Sharpe’s face hardened, his voice taking on a repetitive stress as if he were reciting an obvious truth or a nursery rhyme. ‘And I made it quite plain to you that the case was over. I congratulated you on a brilliant result. I made it crystal clear that everyone was completely satisfied.’ He reached for a file and slammed it down in front of Brock. It was open at a record of a meeting dated the twentieth of September. The wording was almost identical to what Sharpe had just said.

‘You seem intent on shooting yourself in the foot, Brock. Almost obsessional about it. Why is that?’ Sharpe stopped pacing and sat down. ‘I’ve assured the three women that neither they nor their gardener will be disturbed again, and that the case is closed. You’ll write to them yourself, today, and confirm this, and apologise for any inconvenience and distress. All right?’

‘Yes, sir.’ He felt ten years old again, in the headmaster’s study, the only one of the Black Hand Gang to have been caught wiping boot polish on doorhandles on April Fool’s Day.

‘And I want a copy of the letters for my file.’ Sharpe filled his lungs and relaxed slowly. ‘Anyway, on a brighter note, your DS Kolla seems to be acquitting herself extremely well on the Working Party committee. Robert is very pleased with her, tells me she’s taken it by the scruff of the neck and made it perform. Excellent leadership qualities, he says. Focused. Sound.’

Sound was Sharpe’s favourite quality, Brock knew. He was in no doubt that his own soundness quotient had taken a dive.