“That’s Turner’s father,” Collins said. “His mother couldn’t come. She’s in hospital, dying of cancer.”
The man had a slightly dazed expression as he nodded and shook hands with the people who approached him. Kate looked away.
“I’d better go.”
Collins regarded her. “If you want to hang on a second I’ll give you a lift.”
“No, it’s all right. Thanks.” She was suddenly in a hurry to get away.
“I’d like a word with you anyway. I won’t be a minute.”
Without waiting for her to reply, he went over to where the young woman stood, surrounded now by a group of weeping women. He waited on the edge, his bulk towering over them, then stepped forward. Kate saw him speak to Turner’s widow, taking both her hands in his. The young woman nodded, and then Collins moved on to shake hands with the man and woman on either side of her, and lastly the man he had pointed out as Turner’s father. He came back towards Kate.
“The car’s parked at the other side.”
They moved around the mourners towards a line of parked cars. Then Collins stopped. She felt his hand on her arm, restraining her, and looked up to see him staring ahead at the photographer who had been in the chapel. The man’s attention was on the central group around the widow. Kate could hear the click-whir of his camera motor as he took shots.
“Let’s go this way,” Collins said, taking her arm and leading her back the way they had come. They went around the back of the chapel, coming out behind the photographer, so he was facing away from them.
“Why didn’t you want him to see you?” Kate asked.
He glanced at her, then away again. “It was more you I didn’t want him to see. We’ve kept you out of it so far. I don’t want the press to start sniffing around now over some ‘mystery woman’ at the funeral.”
The murder of a psychologist by one of his patients had made national news, but none of the reports had made any mention of Kate’s involvement. She was surprised by the Inspector’s consideration. “Thank you.”
“No need to thank me. The press coverage was bad enough when they thought it was just another failure of Care in the Community. They’ve lost interest now, but if they find out why Ellis killed him we’ll have every tabloid in the country breathing down our necks. It’ll turn into a three-ring circus, and that sort of thing doesn’t help anybody.”
They reached the line of waiting cars. Collins went to a grey Ford. The sergeant who had been with him the first time he had visited Kate’s office was in the driver’s seat, reading a newspaper. He quickly folded it.
“We’re giving Miss Powell a lift,” Collins told him, opening the rear door for her.
The sergeant grinned at Kate, then seemed to think that might be too familiar and looked more serious. He cast a glance at the Inspector, as Collins eased his bulk onto the back seat next to her. “Where to?”
“The nearest tube station’s fine,” Kate said.
The sergeant started the car. Others from the line were already pulling onto the drive.
“I’ve been in touch with the Wynguard Clinic,” Collins said, as they passed through the crematorium gates. “Not that they were able to help much.” A trace of a smile touched his lips. “Your Dr Janson’s a worried woman. It seems the clinic never chased up the check with Ellis’s GP. They didn’t seem to think there was any real need, because he was a ‘known donor’. Is that the right term?”
Kate nodded.
“Anyway, that’s between you and them, but I wouldn’t be surprised if you’d got a case for negligence. I doubt that Ellis knew who the real Alex Turner’s doctor was, so if the clinic had tried to get hold of his medical records they’d have known something was wrong straight away. I’m not sure how the law stands on that but it might be worth you taking legal advice.”
She shook her head. “I can’t blame them.”
Collins let the matter drop. “The other thing I wanted to tell you is that Paul Sutherland’s been released,” he went on. “He still claims he can’t remember where he was on the night your office was broken into, but from what the officers who arrested him said, that’s pretty easy to believe. Apparently it was a while before he was sober enough to talk any sense at all. But they’ve managed to account for at least some of his movements, and it doesn’t look as though it was him.”
The car smelt of cigarettes. Kate wound down the window a little to let some air in. “I never thought it was.” The breeze was cold on her face.
“No luck with fingerprints, either, I’m afraid.” Collins’s knees pressed into the back of the seat in front. Sitting next to him, Kate felt like a little girl. “Looks as though whoever did it wore gloves. So they either knew what they were doing, or they’d got cold hands.”
“What about the matches?”
Collins turned down his mouth and shook his head. “Doesn’t prove it was Ellis, if that’s what you mean.”
“So you don’t think it was.”
“I don’t think a box of matches proves anything, one way or another. It could just have been a burglar who smoked. We’ll keep an eye on your office as well as your flat, but I wouldn’t read too much into it.”
Kate gazed out of the window. “Did you find out where he called from?” She had dialled 1471 after Ellis had phoned her. His number had been logged on the caller-return system, and she had passed it to Collins. But she could see from his expression that it had been a wasted effort.
“He used a public phone box near Oxford Circus tube station. Nobody can remember seeing him.” The Inspector sounded disgruntled by the admission. “Somebody like that’s not going to be able to keep out of sight for very long, though. He’ll turn up sooner or later.”
The sergeant pulled into the kerb. “This okay? There’s a tube station on the other side of the road.”
Kate said it was and got out. The tobacco smell seemed to follow her, caught on her clothes. Collins climbed out as well. The car sank down slightly as he eased into the front seat. As it pulled away, Kate looked to see if the road was clear to cross. Outlined against the grey clouds, the thin column of the crematorium chimney was poised like a rebuking finger.
That night she cooked herself a cheese and ham omelette, with Brussels sprouts and two slices of wholemeal bread. Sprouts weren’t her favourite vegetable, but they were rich in folic acid, which was important in pregnancy. Even though she had no appetite, there was an incentive to make an effort.
Part of her noted the irony that, now she was able to eat as much as she liked without feeling guilty or running to the gym, she wasn’t able to enjoy it.
Kate found that she had moved to an acceptance of being pregnant without really being aware of it. The thrill she had expected to feel seemed to have been subsumed in the larger emotional turmoil. At odd moments the knowledge would hit her, and there would be a vertiginous plunge that was almost terror. But even that was already growing rarer.
She forced herself to eat the omelette and helped down the final breadcrust with a glass of milk. Taking her plate and glass into the kitchen, she washed and dried them.
When she had put them away she looked at her watch. It was eight o’clock. She went back into the lounge and stared at the television until it was ten o’clock and she felt she could reasonably go to bed.
Sleep came hard. Often it was little more than a restless, half-awake state that would last until the early hours, leaving her feeling grainy and listless when it was time to get up. It was like that now. Kate groped for the clock as the insistent beep of the alarm dragged her towards consciousness. She fumbled to turn it off before realising that the noise was coming from outside her room.