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In the brief silence that followed, Longbright decided to ask an indelicate question. “Was your relationship with her more than just professional, Mr. Spender? Were you sleeping with her?”

“No, that would have been a violation of our customer-relationship policy,” said Spender without a flinch.

Oddly, the sergeant believed him. But you were planning to, she thought, once you’d finished making her over into the image of your ideal sexual partner.

“She was your type, though. I’ve seen the similar look of the girls on your arm who are always in Heat. I mean the magazine,” she added hastily. “Why did she come here? There must be plenty of less expensive places.”

Sonya took over, glancing at her boss. “I think she realised that the first step towards becoming a successful photographic model was looking and behaving like one. That’s why she wanted the deportment and elocution lessons. We agreed to bankroll her at the salon for three months, at the end of which time we would assess her and decide whether to sign her with our agency.”

“Did either of you know that she had a drug habit?”

“No, of course not. Although I noticed that she had some problems with her skin.”

“So you never saw the state of her arms?”

Sonya looked blankly at her, a pose she had perfected. “I don’t think so. She told me she was from a good part of Fulham. She spoke nicely. I thought she was probably from a decent middle-class background. Goths often are.”

“And of course that would be important.”

“This isn’t some shitty little Hackney hairdresser’s,” said Spender sharply. “We have high standards to maintain. Our ladies come here for lifestyle amelioration.” Longbright felt he had learned the phrase especially for this use.

As she took her leave, she walked back through the salon and stopped beside the receptionist’s counter. “I like your hair,” Longbright told one of the passing stylists. “What colour is that?”

“Amaretto Latte,” the girl told her, touching the ends lightly. She was used to compliments. “I’m planning Cappuccino highlights with a biscuit finish.”

“Sounds fattening.” Longbright looked about. “Pretty exclusive place. They don’t just cut hair here, do they?”

“Oh, no,” said the girl, whose badge proclaimed her as Lavinia. “We do diet and exercise, spa treatments, stress management, life training-‘

“What’s that?” asked Longbright.

“Some of the ladies-‘ she lowered her voice in confidence, ”-have recurring issues with portion control, so they get enrolled in Mr. Spender’s club, Circe. I can get you a brochure if you want.“

“Yes, I’d like that.”

Lavinia returned with a copy and slipped it to Longbright. “Only I’m not really supposed to give them out to casual visitors,” she confided. “But seeing as you had a private meeting with Mr. Spender, I’m sure it’s all right.”

As Longbright walked back past Harrods towards the tube station, flicking through the brochure, she decided to call Kershaw. “Giles, is it legal to employ a private doctor to offer advice to your customers?” she asked.

“Bit of a grey area,” the forensic man told her. “Pharmacies allow their shop assistants to recommend products. The government’s more relaxed about it than they used to be.”

“This guy’s offering lifestyle courses to women ”under the expert guidance of trained physicians,“ it says here. I can’t help thinking that our dead girl is the key somehow, and I need a key to her.”

“Got any names for me from that brochure?”

“Hang on.” She scanned the page. “Dr R. Martino MD BMA, Dr P. Ranswar MD BSA.”

“Give me about ten minutes. I’ll get back to you.” He rang off.

Longbright loitered outside a coffee shop. Aproned waitresses were hunched in its marbled doorway, sheltering from the sleet and guiltily dragging on cigarettes as if half expecting to be charged with armed robbery. Her phone rang.

“No record of them on the BMA register,” said Kershaw. “Neither is licenced to practise in the UK.”

“You mean they’ve been struck off?” asked Longbright.

“No, it could mean they were originally licenced in non-Commonwealth areas, or that they qualified with quasi-medical diplomas, possibly in homeopathic sciences, and are calling themselves doctors. It wouldn’t necessarily stop them from offering advice, but they wouldn’t be able to issue prescriptions.”

“I want to go in there, Giles. There’s a session starting at noon.”

“If you think it’s a lead…‘ Kershaw began.

“The problem is, I’d have to go in undercover because they’ve seen me at The Temple, and the Circe Club wants three hundred and fifty pounds for the first session. Can we afford it?”

Kershaw had taken to organising the unit’s finances because no-one else wanted the job. “Absolutely not. You’ll have to find another way of getting in if you think it’s that important.”

Lately, Longbright had come to accept her role as the unit’s undercover mistress of disguises on the condition that it came with a decent clothing allowance. For the visit to Circe, she called in a favour from the manager of Typhoon, for whom she had once unravelled a massive credit card fraud. She had reasoned that more might be achieved if she showed sensitivity to the salon’s wealthy clientele, and besides, she had been longing to dress glamorously this winter, but her threadbare social life had been such that an opportunity had not presented itself.

Fifteen minutes later, she exited the store in a fake-leopardskin coat with a red woollen two-piece suit, artificial pearls and patent-leather heels. If Catherine Deneuve ever makes a wildlife documentary, this is what she’d wear, thought Janice. Nor good for Mornington Crescent but appropriate for Knightsbridge.

The club was discreetly tucked away in a Victorian terrace, above and behind the main salon. Why am I doing this? she wondered, waiting for the door to be opened. Because Arthur would have me follow the same lead if he was here.

The steel lattice swung slowly back before her, admitting her to the club’s inner sanctum. Bryant believed that when a case offered no likely scenarios, it was necessary to plunge from the beaten track of police investigation. The difference this time was that Longbright had just six hours left before their grace time expired forever.

36

THE CORRIDORS

Johann had disappeared in the night.

Numb and aching, Madeline uprighted herself. She could see the remains of his footprints trailing off into the briars above the bank. Ryan peered up at the clearing dawn sky. “It’s stopped snowing,” he told her. “Can we go outside and get the food now?”

“No, Ryan, stay in the car.”

“But we’re going to starve to death if we stay here.”

“Don’t exaggerate.”

“I’m cold and I’m thirsty. I want my Game Boy. And I need to go to the toilet again.”

“You went a little while ago; what’s wrong with you?”

“It’s the cold weather.” Ryan had heard his father say it.

Despite her fears, she couldn’t help smiling. “I’ll have to see if the coast is clear. Take a look out of the back.”

Ryan scrambled over the seat and cleared the window. “I can be really quick. I won’t even stop to get a snowball.”

“No, I’ll go.” She thought of Ryan left alone in the car.

Perhaps that was what Johann was waiting for. “Maybe we should go together.”

She reached down to the door handle and pulled it out. The door needed a shoulder to unstick it, and opened with a pop. Taking her son’s hand, she stepped gingerly onto the ice-crusted road, pulling him with her. The sky had returned to a fierce cyan, but the respite felt temporary, as if they were in the eye of a hurricane. He had run while the storm had abated, she told herself. He had reached the decision to leave them alone and make his escape, just as he had engineered his first meeting with her. He had probably moved her handbag that day in order to make her thank him for finding it.