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Authors: Deborah Crombie

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In silent accord, the four remaining moved out into the open. Patrick Rennie, who had left his wife behind, stood holding Hannah’s arm possessively. The still-shocked gauntness of their faces emphasized their likeness, plane by plane. Patrick, Kincaid thought, was making up for yesterday’s failures.

*   *   *

Yesterday it had been Kincaid who held Hannah and wiped the splattered blood from her face. “It’s all right. You’re going to be all right.” The words he’d repeated came back to him, though he’d hardly been conscious of them at the time.

He remembered Gemma crouching next to him, rubbing Hannah’s icy hands, the freckles splashed like stars against her white skin.

Patrick had stepped away and been violently sick.

Gemma had pleaded paperwork this morning and stayed behind at Followdale House, but Kincaid thought that had merely been her way of letting him lay his own ghosts.

Kincaid did not, however, attend the funeral alone. He hadn’t forgotten the promise he’d made himself regarding
Angela Frazer. She rode with him in the Midget, silent, even her hair subdued without its violet spikes. It was only when he’d found a parking space near the church that she spoke, staring intently at the rivulets trickling down the windscreen. “It’s not fair.”

“No,” he answered, and went round to help her from the car.

She stood next to him now, watching Graham’s black Ford draw up to the curb. “I’ll have to be going.” Angela looked up at him gravely. “Thanks. I’m sorry about what I said … you know.” Then, standing on tiptoe, she brushed her lips against his and ran down the walk.

“Do you think she’ll be all right?” Hannah asked as they watched the car swallow her and draw away.

Kincaid grinned and brushed a finger against his lips. “I see some indications of resiliency. I’d say it’s possible. If she can survive her parents another year or so. If she can leave them and their quarrels behind and make her own life. The question is,” Kincaid turned to Hannah, “will you be all right?”

Hannah shuddered. “It still doesn’t make sense. Sebastian and Penny needn’t have died. They had no connection with me.”

“That’s what muddled things from the beginning. If we had started out looking for someone who might want you out of the way, we would have found him sooner. He wasn’t quite as clever as he thought.”

“Clever enough,” said Patrick, “to have almost succeeded.”

“He’d been planning for a long time, I think. The idea that Hannah stood between him and his uncle’s money must have become an obsession with him.”

“But Miles never intended to leave anything to me,” Hannah protested, still bewildered.

“Not outright. But in Eddie’s mind it made no difference whether the money went to you directly or to endow the clinic.” Kincaid paused, marshalling his thoughts. “From what Janet said last night, it seems Eddie had little personal contact with his uncle—Janet didn’t even remember his name, offhand—but his mother still corresponded with him occasionally. Some remark she passed on to Eddie must have given him the idea that you were essential to the clinic’s continuation.”

Hannah nodded. “That’s probably true. It’s very specialized work—it’d be difficult to find anyone else qualified to head the project. But still, Miles might have left his estate to someone else—”

“Not if he died intestate. Or Eddie might have had a plan for worming his way into his uncle’s good graces. He was very resourceful. At any rate, I don’t think Miles would have survived you by much.”

Hannah drew a breath of dismay. “Not Miles, too?” Patrick’s arm went round her shoulders.

“And why not?” Kincaid shrugged. He closed his umbrella and shook it. The drizzle had subsided to drips. “Our Eddie was a dab hand with a sedative as well as the blunt instrument. I imagine Eddie’s old mum had a little help in crashing that car—”

“You’d never have proved it,” said Patrick.

“No. Nor that he sedated Janet the night he murdered Sebastian.”

“But what about Sebastian and Penny?”

“Victims of both circumstance and their own characters. Eddie said Sebastian saw him going into your room
that night. Opportunist that he was, Eddie must have been looking for a way to kill you that would look accidental. It’s my guess Sebastian couldn’t resist needling him about what he’d seen, and Eddie couldn’t take a chance on anyone connecting him with you after the fact.”

“And Penny?”

Kincaid hesitated, a sense of his own culpability still strong. “We’ll never be absolutely certain. I think Penny saw both Patrick and Eddie go into Cassie’s office.” Patrick nodded assent. “She wanted to be fair, to give both of you a chance to come forward before she spoke. Unfortunately, she picked the wrong man to confront first. Eddie Lyle didn’t play by the rules.”

“I still don’t understand how he knew I’d be here this week—”

“Remember your burglary? You told me you’d felt violated.”

“That long ago?” Hannah stared vacantly into the churchyard as she thought. “Yes. It was just after I’d signed the timeshare agreement. I remember I thought my papers had been gone through, but nothing was missing.”

“And Eddie borrowed the money to buy into the timeshare just weeks afterwards,” Kincaid said.

“Still, it was all circumstantial,” said Patrick, his lawyer’s instinct intact.

“But the prints on the handkerchief. You said—”

Kincaid answered Hannah gently. “The report still hasn’t come back from the lab, but it’s highly unlikely they found anything. It’s a chancy technique.”

Hannah closed her eyes, her face white. “A bluff? It was all a bluff?”

Kincaid nodded. “It seemed the thing to do.”

Patrick shut Hannah’s umbrella with a jerk and reached for Kincaid’s hand. “I wouldn’t like to play poker with you.” He smiled, his charm reasserting itself. “I’ll wait for you, Hannah.” He turned away down the walk.

Hannah looked at Kincaid for a long moment. “I don’t know what to say. I have to thank you. If you hadn’t—”

“I’d rather you didn’t. Gratitude isn’t the best ingredient for a friendship. Do you think we might …” Kincaid trailed off, not quite sure what he wanted to suggest. Lunch when she came to town? A polite exchange of Christmas cards? Hannah had a lifetime’s experience as a very private person—somehow he couldn’t envision her feeling comfortable with him after their forced intimacy.

Hannah hesitated, her expression lacking the assurance that had seemed so natural to her. “I don’t know. Not just yet, I think. Things are going to be difficult enough for awhile.”

“Yes.” Kincaid looked toward Patrick, idling halfway down the walk.

Hannah followed his gaze. “I thought a lot about what I wanted, what I needed, in those months I was looking for Patrick. Somehow,” she smiled a little ruefully, “I managed to leave Patrick’s needs out of the equation altogether, and it may be delicate going at first, finding the right balance. How we’ll end up I can’t say.”

“You’ll be all right.” He smiled at her, then bent forward to kiss her cheek.

“Goodbye, Duncan.” Hannah turned from him and caught Patrick up. They moved away down the walk, fair head bent over dark.

Kincaid made his way slowly toward the car park, absently
avoiding the puddles standing in the cobbled street. He felt drained and somehow dissatisfied, as if all the tidying up of loose ends had left him dangling.

He turned the corner and looked up as someone bumped his shoulder. A woman in a bright yellow slicker hurried along in front of him. Her light brown hair curled damply about her head and she swung her handbag in rhythm with her stride.

Kincaid sprinted to catch up with her, his heart pounding. He touched her shoulder. “Anne?”

The woman turned to him, startled. Her face was unfamiliar.

*   *   *

Gemma stuck her head around the door of Kincaid’s office. “Finished?”

“Now I am.” He swept everything off his desk and shoved it in the drawer.

“Great filing system,” Gemma said, eyeing the clear surface dubiously.

“At least it’s out of the way.” Kincaid stood up and stretched. They had driven back to London separately, agreeing to face their accumulated avalanche of paper while still off duty.

Gemma came a few steps into the room and wrinkled her nose in distaste at the heavy odor of stale cigarettes. “Been having conferences in here while you were gone, have they?”

Kincaid grinned. “The evidence is irrefutable. Drink?”

Gemma considered. “Just a quick one.”

They avoided the Yard canteen, with its unavoidable shop talk, and made for the pub down Wilfred Street. Kincaid elbowed his way to the bar and returned to their usual corner table with drinks, wine for himself and lager
and lime for Gemma. “Ugh.” He made a face. “Don’t know how you drink that stuff.” Kincaid always criticized, and Gemma never changed her order, probably, he thought, out of pure cantankerousness.

“Practice.” Gemma took a good swallow of her drink and grinned. They sat quietly for a few minutes, the pub’s Saturday night clamor eddying around them, until Gemma pushed her chair back a bit and sighed. “I do need to be getting home, though. Toby will be missing his mum.”

“Yes.” Kincaid imagined the welcome awaiting Gemma, and for an instant envy ran through him. He shook it off and forced a smile. “I wish …” What did he wish? That he hadn’t gone to Followdale at all, in which case Hannah might have died, too?

Gemma thumped her glass down on the table and he raised his eyes to find an unexpected understanding in hers. The corner of her mouth twitched. “If wishes were horses, my old mum used to say—”

“Right.” They smiled at each other companionably.

“Better luck next time?” Gemma suggested.

Kincaid raised his glass. “Cheers.”

D
EBORAH
C
ROMBIE
is a native Texan who has done graduate studies in medieval literature. She has lived in Scotland and England and is married to a Scot. She and her husband and nine-year-old daughter live near Dallas.

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This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

Copyright © 1993 by Deborah Darden Crombie

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the Publisher.

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Crombie, Deborah.
     A share in death / Deborah Crombie.
         p. cm.
     ISBN 0-684-19527-5
     eISBN 978-1-4516-1762-7

BOOK: A Share in Death
2.13Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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