Meredith put Hal's pale brown sweater over her blue jeans and long sleeved T-shirt, pushed her feet into her boots, then grabbed her denim jacket, a scarf and a pair of woolly gloves, figuring it would still be cold outside. Her hand was already on the door handle when the phone rang.
She peeled off her extra layers, replaced Hal's sweater with a red crew-neck of her own, brushed her hair, then let herself out of her room. As she emerged on to the landing, she paused to look down on the chequerboard entrance hall. She could see Hal talking with a tall, dark-haired woman she kind of recognised. It took a moment to place her, then she remembered. The Place des Deux Rennes the night she arrived, leaning against the wall, smoking.
The woman's eyes narrowed, clearly having trouble placing her. 'We exchanged a couple of words the night of the funeral,' Meredith said, helping her out. 'Outside the pizzeria in the square?'
Meredith and Dr O'Donnell followed him through, Meredith asking the older woman polite questions to break the ice. How long she'd lived in Rennes-les-Bains, what her connection with the area was, what she did for a living. Usual sort of stuff.
Shelagh O'Donnell answered easily enough, but there was a nervous tension behind everything she said. She was very thin. Her eyes were constantly in motion and she repeatedly rubbed her fingertips against her thumb. Meredith placed her at not more than early thirties, but she had the lined skin of someone older. Meredith could see why the police might not have taken her late-night observations seriously.
They sat at the same table in the corner that they had occupied the previous evening with Hal's uncle. The atmosphere was very different in the daytime. It was hard to summon the memory of wine and cocktails from the night before given the smell of beeswax polish and fresh flowers on the bar and a stack of boxes waiting to be unpacked.
There was a pause while he poured. Dr O'Donnell took hers black. As she stirred in her sugar, Meredith noticed the same red scars on her wrists
she'd seen first time round, and wondered what had happened to cause them.
'Before anything,' Hal said, 'I want to thank you for agreeing to see me.' Meredith was relieved he sounded calm, collected and rational. 'I knew your father. He was a good man, a friend. But, I've got to tell you, I really don't have anything more I can tell you.'
'I understand,' Hal replied, 'but if you could just bear with me while I run through things. I appreciate the accident was more than a month ago, but there are things about the investigation I'm not happy with. I was hoping you might be able to tell me a little about the actual night. I think the police said you thought you had heard something?'
Shelagh darted her eyes to Meredith, then to Hal, then away again. 'They're still saying Seymour went off the road because he was drunk?' 'That's what I find hard to accept. I just can't see Dad doing that.' Shelagh picked at a thread on her pants. Meredith could see how nervous she was.
'How did you meet Hal's father?' she said, hoping to give her a bit of confidence.
'Well, Seymour was just that. Someone everyone liked. Everyone respected him, too, even if they didn't really know him. He was always polite, courteous to waiters, shopkeepers, treated everybody with respect, unlike . . .' She broke off. Meredith and Hal exchanged a look, both thinking the same thing - that Shelagh was comparing Seymour to Julian Lawrence. 'He wasn't here much, of course,' she continued quickly, 'but I got to know him when. . .
Shelagh sighed. 'I went through a . . . difficult time in my life a couple of years back. I was working on an archaeological dig not far from here, in the Sabarthès mountains, and got drawn into something. Made some bad decisions.' She paused. 'The long and the short of it is, things have been difficult since then. My health's not so good, so I can only manage a few hours a week, doing a little valuation work at the ateliers in Couiza.' She stopped again. 'I came to Rennes-les-Bains to live about eighteen months ago now. I have a friend, Alice, who lives in a village not far from here, Los Seres, with her husband and daughter, so it was a logical place to come.'
'That's the man,' Shelagh said. 'My friend Alice knew him well.' Her eyes darkened. 'I met him too.'
Meredith could see from the look on Hal's face that the conversation had brought something back to him, but he didn't say anything.
'The point is, I had been having problems. Drinking too much.' Shelagh turned to Hal. 'I met your dad in a bar. In Couiza actually. I was tired, I'd probably had one too many. We got talking. He was kind, a little worried about me. Insisted he drive me back to Rennes-les-Bains. Nothing dodgy about it. Next morning, he turned up and took me back to Couiza to pick up my car.' She paused. 'Never mentioned it again, but after that, he always popped in when he was over here from England.'
Meredith still thought they were both a little naïve. Plenty of people said one thing and did another, but Shelagh's evident admiration and respect for Hal's father impressed her all the same.
'The police told Hal that you think you heard the accident, but didn't realise what it was until the next morning,' she said gently. Is that right?' Shelagh raised her coffee cup to her mouth with a shaky hand, took a couple of sips, then put it back in the saucer with a rattle.
'Definitely something, not the usual screech of brakes, or tyres when people take the bend too fast, but just a kind of rumbling, I guess.' She paused. 'I was listening to John Martyn, Solid Air. It's pretty mellow, but even so I wouldn't have heard the sound outside if it hadn't been in the pause between the end of one track and the start of the next' 'What time was this?'
'About one or thereabouts. I got up and looked out of the window, but I couldn't see anything at all. It was completely dark, completely quiet. I just assumed the car had gone past. It was only in the morning when I saw the police and ambulance down at the river that I wondered.'
Hal was looking from one to the other. I'm not sure I see why this is so significant.' 'It might not be,' Meredith said quickly. 'It's just weird. First, even if your father was way over the limit - I'm not saying he was - would he really be driving with no lights ?'
'Sure, but from what you said earlier, it wasn't particularly badly damaged.' She carried on. Also, according to what the police told you Hal, Shelagh heard a screech of brakes, et cetera, right?' He nodded.
'Two things. First, why is the police report inaccurate? Second - and, I admit, this is speculation - if your father did lose control on the bend and went over, surely there would have been (a) more noise and (b) something to see. I can't believe all the lights would have blown.'
'There is something else,' Shelagh put in. They both turned to her, for a moment almost having forgotten she was there. 'When I turned in, maybe a quarter of an hour later, I heard another car on the road. Because of earlier, it made me look out.'
'It was a blue Peugeot, heading south in the direction of Sougraigne. It only occurred to me in the morning that this was after the accident, about one thirty by then. If they'd come through the town, the driver couldn't have failed to see the car crashed into the river. Why didn't they notify the police then?'
'Look,' he said, pushing his hands into his pockets, 'I know this is a terrible imposition, but is there any way I could persuade you to come to the police station in Couiza with me? Tell them what you've just told us.'
'I know. But if we went together.. .' he persisted. 'I've seen the accident report and most of what you've told me isn't in the file.' He pushed his fingers through his mop of hair. 'I'll run you over there.' He fixed her with his blue gaze. 'I just want to get to the bottom of it. For my dad's sake.'
From the anguished expression on her face, Meredith could see how hard Shelagh was finding it. She clearly wanted nothing to do with the police. But her affection for Hal's father won out. She gave a sharp nod.
Shelagh gave her address. They all shook hands, a little awkward in the circumstances, then made their way back to the lobby. Meredith headed back to her room, leaving Hal to walk Dr O'Donnell to her car.
Julian Lawrence was breathing fast. His blood was pounding in his temples. He strode into his study, slamming the door behind him so hard that the reverberation made the glass in the bookcases rattle. He rummaged in his jacket pocket for his cigarettes and lighter. His hand was shaking so badly, it took several attempts to light it. The commissaire had mentioned someone had come forward, an Englishwoman called Shelagh O'Donnell, but that she hadn't seen anything. The name had rung a bell, but he'd let it go. Since the police didn't seem to take her seriously, it hadn't seemed important. They told him she was an ivrogne, a drunk.
When she'd turned up at the hotel this morning, even then he hadn't put two and two together. The irony was that he'd slipped into the office at the back of the bar to listen to the conversation between her, Hal and Meredith Martin only because he had recognised her from one of the antique dealerships in Couiza. He had jumped to the conclusion that Ms Martin had invited her here to discuss the Bousquet Tarot.
Having listened in, he realised why O'Donnell's name was familiar. In July 2005, there'd been an incident at an archaeological dig site in the Sabarthès mountains. Julian couldn't remember the exact details, but several people had been killed, including a well-known local author whose name escaped him. None of that mattered.
What did matter was that she had seen his car. Julian was sure it would be impossible to prove it was his, rather than any one of many identical vehicles, but it might be just enough to tip the balance. The police hadn't treated O'Donnell seriously as a witness before but, if Hal kept pushing it, they might.
He couldn't believe O'Donnell had associated the Peugeot with the Domaine de la Cade yet, otherwise she would hardly have come up here this morning. But he couldn't risk her making the connection.
He would have to do something. Yet again, his hand was being forced, just as it had been with his brother. Julian glanced up at the painting on the wall above his desk: the old Tarot symbol, offering infinite possibilities, while he felt increasingly trapped.