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Authors: Deborah Crombie

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BOOK: And Justice There Is None
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In the distance he could see the cloverleaf towers of Henry VIII’s Camber Castle, floating like a mirage, and beyond that rose the low green hill that hid the ancient Cinque Port of Winchelsea in its folds.

When he reached Winchelsea Beach he stood, looking out over the gray, rolling water, unaware of the cold until his hands and feet lost all sensation.

Then he turned back the way he had come, reaching Rye as dusk settled over its cobbled streets and red tile roofs. Feeling invisible in the dying light, he climbed up into the town. From the lookout on Watchbell Street he could see lights wink on along the quay and the Channel, and somehow his very isolation gave him strength.

At last the cold and dark drove him down again, and he made his way home, drifting through the footpaths as insubstantially as a ghost. Smoke curled from Jane’s chimney, and as he stepped into the house he smelled something savory baking in the oven, but when he called out there was no answer. Jane must be in the greenhouse, tending the potted cyclamens and azaleas she had carefully nurtured for the Christmas market.

Another scent drew him forward, into the sitting room, something green and sharp and fresh. Alex stood rooted, gazing at the tree that filled the room, the glass star at its tip sparkling against the dark vault of the kiln. His life seemed to telescope before him,
compounding his loss. There was Dawn, his childhood, and something beyond memory that even now he could not bear to look at directly.

Alex fell to his knees before the tree, overcome by great, wrenching sobs that tore at his throat and pierced his chest.

Suddenly Jane was there, smelling of cold and earth. “Oh, Alex,” she whispered. “I’m sorry. I’m so sorry.” She tried to put an arm round him but he pulled away.

“No.
I’m
sorry.” His mind felt suddenly clear again, as if the static that had fogged it for days had vanished. “I’ve got to go back. There are things—”

“Fern rang this afternoon. She said the police are looking for you, they’ve even put out an alert for your car—”

“The police? What do they want with me?”

“I’m sure they hope you know something about the murder. The sooner you talk with them, the sooner you’ll be able to clear things up.”

It hadn’t occurred to him that the police might think him a witness—or a suspect. Well, he would go back to London first thing the next morning, and he would talk to them. But his purpose had become clear, and he’d no intention of letting the police or anyone else interfere with his agenda.

CHAPTER EIGHT

Saturday street market has existed in Portobello Road since the 1860’s. Selling meat, fish, fruit, vegetables, and flowers during the day, the costermongers were joined on Saturday nights by numerous street sellers and entertainers.

—Whetlor and Bartlett,
from
Portobello
         

G
EMMA LAY IN BED, STARING AT THE PARTIALLY OPENED SLATS OF
the blinds and hoping for the faint gray streaks that would presage dawn. Kincaid slept with his back to her, his breathing comfortingly steady. From the next room she could hear Toby’s occasional snort; he was getting over a slight cold.

At last she gave in and tilted her head so that she could see the luminous face of the bedside clock; she groaned. It was only bloody five o’clock. Daylight was still a good two hours off, and it looked as if sleep had deserted her for the night.

Nor had they gone to bed at a reasonable hour the previous evening. Still furious with Kincaid over the business of Doug Cullen’s invitation, she’d turned on him as soon as he arrived to help her pack.

“How could you? How could you accept a dinner invitation in the midst of moving house? We’ll be tired, and filthy, and I’ve only so much time to get the new house sorted—”

“But I thought it would give you a break—”

“It’s our first evening in the new house as a family!”

His face fell. “Of course, you’re right. It was really stupid of me. I’ll ring Doug straight away and say we can’t come.” He flipped open his phone and stepped outside.

Gemma knew she should be pleased at his capitulation, but her face flamed as she imagined his conversation with Cullen. When he returned a moment later, she spat, “Now I feel a right bitch. They’ll have made arrangements already—”

“Gemma, they’ll understand.” He frowned at her. “It’s not like you to be unreasonable—”

“So now I’m unreasonable?” She turned away and began rolling a wineglass in a sheet of newspaper, her fingers trembling.

“That’s not what I meant, and you know it.” He came to stand beside her, placing a tentative hand on her shoulder. “What’s wrong?”

She hesitated, then the words boiled out in a rush. “The super called me in today. Gerry Franks complained to him that I’d been too soft on Karl Arrowood.”

“Surely Lamb didn’t take him seriously?”

“Not really. But he told me my management skills could use some improvement.”

“So what did you do?”

She took another glass from the kitchen shelf. “At first I was going to rip Franks to shreds, but then I decided that wasn’t the most helpful tack. I told him he was welcome to get off the case, but that he was a valuable asset and I’d rather we tried to work together, and that I hadn’t meant to exclude him from portions of the investigation.”

“Very diplomatic of you.” Kincaid raised a quizzical eyebrow. “Was it true?”

“Oh, I suppose the super’s right,” she admitted, grimacing. “Franks is a good officer, especially with detail—he has that sort of bulldog mentality, worries at things until he gets them right. I should’ve managed the situation better.”

“It sounds as though you’ve made a good start at improving things,” Kincaid had said reassuringly, and thus, harmony had been more or less restored.

Now, lying awake in the predawn darkness, she found herself
thinking of her ex-husband, Rob, who would have seen her confidence as an opportunity to tell her just how
he
would have handled things. Kincaid’s supportiveness, she realized, was rare, and a trait to be appreciated—so why the hell couldn’t she bring herself to tell him so?

T
HREE HOURS LATER, HUNCHED OVER HER DESK AT THE STATION, SHE’D
pored over every note, every communication from the incident room, every file, wondering what she could possibly have missed. Exhausted, she groaned and dropped her head in her hands.

At the soft rap on her door, she looked up, blinking. It was Melody, carrying two coffee cups and a bag that smelled suspiciously of fresh carrot muffins.

“Latte, again? And breakfast? You must be the coffee fairy, Melody. Or coffee angel, I should say.”

A blush stained Melody’s plump cheeks. “I get off the tube at Notting Hill Gate. So it’s no trouble to pop into the Starbucks on my way here. I know how much you like it, boss, and it seemed, especially today … I mean, I heard about Sergeant Franks talking to the super, and I think it’s bloody unfair.”

“Thanks. But I suppose he had a point. We don’t seem to be making much progress, do we? Here, sit down, eat your muffin.”

Melody sat obediently and peeled the paper wrapper from her breakfast. “Remember you asked me if I knew why Otto Popov was so certain Arrowood was guilty? Well, I went round the pubs last night, some of the more fringy ones, if you know what I mean.”

“Not dressed like that?” Gemma gestured at Melody’s neat skirt and jacket.

“Not on my life. I wore my leather trousers—you’d never have recognized me.”

“I take it you weren’t looking for a date?”

Melody grinned. “Well, I did chat up some okay-looking blokes. But I got a name, in the end, someone who might know something about Popov. A little Cockney named Bernard. I found him in a pub
near the flyover, and after a couple of pints he agreed to have a chat with you, for the price of a pint and some readies.”

Gemma’s interest quickened. “When? Where?”

“Lunchtime today, in the Ladbroke Arms. Said he wanted to meet someplace no one would notice him. But, as Bernard has a face like a monkey and smells like he hasn’t bathed for years, I don’t think he’ll be exactly inconspicuous.”

G
EMMA TENSED WHEN THE PHONE ON HER DESK RANG, FEARING A REPEAT
of yesterday’s summons to the superintendent’s office. But it was the officer on duty in reception. “There’s a young man to see you, Inspector. Says his name is Alex Dunn.”

“Dunn?” Gemma repeated, before swiftly collecting herself. “Right. Put him in an interview room. I’ll be down in a second.” Hanging up, she said to Melody, “Come with me. I’ll need backup on this.”

Alex Dunn rose as they entered the room, holding his hand out as if it were an ordinary social occasion. He was about Gemma’s age, good-looking in a tidy sort of way, and on first impression it seemed to Gemma that his was not the sort of appeal likely to make a woman risk a marriage.

When she had introduced herself and Melody, she switched on the recorder and gestured for him to sit again.

“Is that necessary?” he asked, with a shocked glance at the recorder. His ready confidence seemed to ebb a little.

“Oh, I think so,” Gemma replied evenly. “We’ve been looking everywhere for you for five days. That tends to make us feel a bit official.”

“I didn’t know. Honestly. I was down at my aunt’s in Sussex—a friend drove me there on Saturday—and it never occurred to me that anyone wanted to talk to me. I wasn’t …” His voice trailed off. “Myself,” he concluded.

“How could you
not
realize that the police would want to question you? Your mistress was murdered—”

“She was not my mistress! I mean—I suppose technically she was—but I never thought of it that way. That makes it sound—makes her sound—cheap.”

“Well, however you thought of it,” Gemma kept her tone tart, “you were still the person closest to her, barring her husband. Did Dawn talk about him?”

“She never talked about Karl. I think, when she was with me, that she liked to pretend Karl didn’t exist. If I pressed her about it, I mean about leaving him, she would just … withdraw. Shake her head and get this closed look.”

“Did she ever give you the impression that she was afraid of her husband?”

“No. And she would have told me,” he insisted, but he sounded less than certain.

“And she never told you that Karl suspected she was having an affair?”

“No.”

“Did you see Dawn on the day she died?”

“No. I rang her mobile from a phone box several times. But she didn’t answer.”

“From a phone box? Isn’t that a bit cloak-and-dagger for a woman who wasn’t worried about her husband?”

Alex colored. “It was to ensure my number never showed up on her itemized calls.”

“Very cautious of her,” commented Melody.

“Dawn was … thorough. About everything. That’s just the sort of person she was.”

Gemma thought of Dawn Arrowood’s careful blotting out of her background, of her family, and of her neat and characterless bedroom. “Did Dawn ever talk about herself, where she came from, that sort of thing?” she asked, curious.

“Yeah, she did. Clapham, or Croyden, something like that. Her father ran a supermarket.”

“He still does,” Gemma murmured, but she saw that Alex didn’t understand. “Go on. What else?”

“Oh, the silly things you do as a kid. Sneaking cigarettes, kisses
on the playground, that sort of thing. And she talked about her friend Natalie, and how she always wanted a family like that, big and noisy and busy.” He frowned. “But I don’t think it would have suited her, somehow.”

“Did she mention any friends other than Natalie?”

“No. There didn’t seem to be anyone other than Karl’s business associates. And me.”

“Did she talk about wanting children?”

“Only once. When we’d—when she’d had a bit too much wine. She cried. Then, when I tried to comfort her, she got angry. Said I didn’t understand, that Karl would never let her have children. I said—Well, you can guess what I said. But it was no use. And she was always very careful about that, too.”

“Birth control?” When he nodded, Gemma added, “Apparently not careful enough.”

“What do you mean?”

“You didn’t know? She didn’t tell you?”

“Tell me what?” His voice rose. “You’re not saying—”

“She was pregnant. The doctor had confirmed it that afternoon.”

Dunn’s eyes were dilated with shock, his face the hue of parchment. “But … I don’t … How could she not tell me?”

“Maybe she meant to. But she never had the chance. Or maybe it wasn’t your baby; maybe it was Karl’s. His vasectomy could have failed; that’s what he claims, after all. Or maybe it was someone else’s altogether—”

His face bleached whiter still, and Gemma feared she might have pushed him too far.

But he shoved back his chair, shaking with rage, and stabbed a finger at her. “She wasn’t seeing anyone else. You make her sound like a slag, and it’s not true! If I know anything about her, it’s that she loved me. She would have left him, we would have worked something out—”

“Okay, point taken. Sit back down, Alex, please. Constable, could you get Mr. Dunn some water?”

He obeyed her, reluctantly, and when he was seated again and had sipped at the water Melody brought him, Gemma said, “Look, I’m
sorry. Let’s start over. Why don’t you tell me about last Friday. Were you supposed to see Dawn that day?”

“No. We’d met the day before, but she’d said she had a doctor’s appointment on Friday—a routine checkup—and that she was meeting Natalie for tea. And I was planning to visit my aunt, as well as getting ready for Saturday market, so … If I’d insisted she come by the flat, maybe—” He looked stricken.

“Then you’d be assuming her murder was happenstance, and we don’t believe that. I believe that whoever waited for Dawn that day would have waited longer, or come back another time.” As Gemma spoke, she realized how strongly she meant it.

“But—if it was Karl—And if she had left—”

“Karl might have changed his mind? From what I know of the man, that seems unlikely. And we’ve no proof that he killed his wife. It seems to me that you and your friends—particularly Otto—have made an awfully big assumption.”

“But—Otto said—Otto was sure that it was Karl. I didn’t want to believe him—”

BOOK: And Justice There Is None
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