Authors: Priscilla Masters
âWe met at The Armoury a couple of weeks ago.'
âAnd how do you feel about him?'
The girl almost drooled. âMr Barton is a very attractive man,' she said primly. And volunteered no more but turned her gaze back to the computer screen.
Attractive and wealthy
, Delia reflected.
Even more so now he'll be entitled to a cool million pounds compensation for the loss of his family.
She stood up. The interview was over.
Alex rang Martha's office at a little after 10 a.m., again to Jericho's evident disapproval. Martha took the call at once. Palfreyman may as well get used to these â she fished around in her mind for the word, finally snagging it on her line â interludes.
âI've got some surprising news for you,' Randall said. âAnd if it's all right with you it'd be nice to pop over and tell you face-to-face. OK?'
âNaturally. I'm intrigued.' She couldn't hide that she was pleased to hear from him again and wondered what had turned up.
He appeared at midday. âYou say you're intrigued,' he said. âSo am I.'
He folded his lanky frame into the chair, stretched his long legs out in front of him and gave her a very straight look. âWe have some answers,' he confessed, âbut more questions.'
âGo on.'
âThere definitely isn't a body in the house,' he said. âWe've had a thorough look and she's not there. Before you ask,' his face held a tinge of amusement, âshe's not buried in the garden. There's no freshly dug earth there. She is not walled up in the garage which is completely empty, nor is she in the small wooden shed behind the apple tree. And her car has not turned up anywhere. We've looked through airport car parks, put out a stop if seen. And nothing.' He crossed and recrossed his legs. Then grinned. âIt's more difficult to hide a car than you'd realize.'
âTell me about it,' she said. âI got ticketed last week in the town centre. Ten tiny minutes over my time.'
âYou should have . . .' His eyes were warm but his voice tailed away. It wasn't her way to use her influence to get off a parking ticket. He continued. âHer mobile is switched off or dead and goes straight through to answer phone without us getting a hit on it. We've had a team of officers ring every single telephone number and contact that Gordon and James gave us. They are naturally frantic.'
âHospitals? Maybe she was confused, hurt, ill, made her way . . .' Her voice died away as she interpreted Alex's slow shake of the head correctly.
âThe fire was started deliberately,' he continued. âAccelerants â petrol-soaked rags. According to the forensic fire team the property caught fire so well partly because she'd apparently used some proprietary carpet cleaner, which was highly inflammable, to clean her hall carpet. We can't know whether our arsonist knew this or whether he just hit lucky. But it worked in his or her favour all right.'
âSo where do you think she is?'
Alex's shrug told her all. âI think she's dead,' he said bluntly. âIt's been a week now. She hasn't been in touch with her sons. There has been no activity on her phone since the night of Monday the seventh when she spoke to James. According to him, she sounded perfectly normal and promised to call in this weekend. Since then nothing.'
âSo you think she's been abducted and murdered.' Something struck her. âOf course,
she
would have known about the carpet cleaner.'
Randall looked up. âWhat on earth are you saying? That Monica Deverill set fire to her
own
house?'
This time it was Martha's turn to shrug. Then looking straight at Alex Randall, she followed up with, âHow were her finances?'
âI've got a team of officers on the job at the moment, checking her passport, bank statement, mobile phone stuff.' He gave a deep sigh. âAll the usual. I still think that her fate holds the key to the Melverley fire.' He paused. âDo you want to visit the scene again?'
âI don't see how I can, Alex,' Martha said. âThis isn't a case for a coroner â yet. It's a missing person and therefore a case for you.'
âI just thought â'
âIf a death is involved I'll be happy to work with you,' Martha said, âmore than. But in the meantime I should concentrate on the inquests for the three members of the Barton family who died.'
âSo I'm on my own,' Alex finished, getting out of the chair. âWell, thanks anyway.'
âKeep in touch,' Martha advised.
The minute he had gone she felt cross with herself for being such a pedant. Why was she being so linear? Sticking strictly to guidelines had never been a feature of the way she had conducted enquiries before. Besides, she enjoyed Alex Randall's visits to her office, the way he stretched out those long legs and relaxed. Maybe that was the real reason she felt she should draw up lines, build fences, so she could hide behind them when necessary. But Randall did seem more relaxed these days, happier. She had always suspected that behind the formality of a Detective Inspector Alex Randall was a man with a troubled personal life. Although lately it had seemed as though that was melting away.
Curious, she thought, then sat forward and put her chin into her cupped hand, staring straight ahead, seeing not her organized room or the view over the town, not the telephone, the files, the books or the computer screen, but Alex Randall's warm eyes and crooked, sometimes apologetic grin. This was every woman's nightmare, she decided: early forties, widowed, twin teenagers â and she had a schoolgirl crush.
She felt her face flush with humility. This was ghastly. She had to work with the man. He was married, for goodness' sake. Besides, he'd never given her one crumb of a hint that he felt anything for her but as a valued colleague.
âSo stop dreaming, Martha Gunn,' she admonished herself, âand wake up â to the real world.'
S
he almost forgot about the arson cases over the weekend, which was spent in a frenzy of activity. Sam was playing in a match and Sukey wanted to come along, together with a gaggle of friends. Martha watched the girls pile into the back of the car and knew this was the way it would be in future for his sons and their friends. This glamorous world, the word, â
footballer
', whispered in the back of the car, accompanied with giggles, told her it all. Yet as she stood, shivering on the touchline, watching the players muddy themselves over a game that was scrappy to say the least, she wondered. What was it about footballers that made them so glamorous? Purely their income? It made headlines, sure. But was that it? So many players didn't get paid anything like the Premier League boys, her own son included. They did it for the love of the game â or perhaps because they couldn't think of anything else to do and had pent up energy that needed spending. She smiled as she watched her son slither towards the goal, lift the ball up â and watched it bounce off the bar to the agonized groans of the Stoke City sympathizers and delighted whoops of the opposition. Already she could feel commiserations and platitudes spilling out of her mouth. Sometimes it seemed a tough way to make a living.
Two hours later she was cooking for the still-giggling girls and Sam and his two mates, who seemed oblivious to the female interest, concentrating instead on a detailed post-mortem of the game. Kick by kick, pass by pass. Martha slid two lasagnes on to the top shelf of the oven and started to make the salad and garlic bread. But, as she watched the beginnings of flirtation on the girls' part and oblivion to the females' interest on the boys' part, she felt that sudden wash of isolation when a parent realizes their offspring are no longer their sons and daughters but about to emerge, butterfly-like, into adulthood and that the parental role would dim and fade until it barely existed except in times of extreme trouble. It wasn't the same feeling as she had experienced when Martin had died. That had been loneliness, yes, and grief too. No, this was different. Sukey and Sam who had been her focus for so many years, were now inching away from her, drifting down the river of life, while she was left standing on the banks, waving them off with a white handkerchief. Even more strong than the feeling that they were moving downstream was the consciousness that she stood on the bank perfectly alone. No one was at her side. This, then, was true loneliness.
She wandered into her study. No messages on her phone. She pressed the button and the voice confirmed this with a touch of spite.
You have no messages
. No messages.
Absolutely no messages
it might have added. She felt a sudden urge to confide in her mother and spent the next twenty minutes in deep conversation.
Laura Rees, Martha's mother, was Irish and now in her late sixties, a quirky, funny, unpredictable woman who was âall heart'. She listened to her daughter's outpourings without comment then said drily, âWell, now you've come round to your senses let's just hope you haven't left it too late.'
The result was that Martha felt even more down that evening, sitting in, hearing Sam and Sukey's lively and excited conversations with their friends, bursts of music as doors opened and closed. The giggles of the girls and the gruff voices of the boys. She felt excluded. Old and alone with her mother's words ringing in her ears. She gave a deep sigh and then was ashamed of herself. It was not like her to be self-pitying and it was not how she wanted to be. â
You've just been too busy with the twins and your work
,' her mother's voice continued scolding her. Martha made a face and was tempted even to stick her tongue out.
So now what? Having indulged herself quite shamelessly she squared her shoulders and sat up, a burst of energy propelling her into action as now she plotted and planned.
She couldn't Internet date. She just couldn't go through with all that. She'd heard of a website called Ivory Towers, was even tempted to go online and check it out. But five minutes later she was still sitting with her chin in her hands, staring into space. Love wasn't like that, she reasoned. It was special and personal. One could meet hundreds of men the right age, background, even ones who shared the same identical pursuits, intellect and interest. But it took that magic spark to fall in love. And without love there was no point, was there?
She answered her own question. No, mouthing the word. Emphatically the answer was no. Then, with a gasp of irritation at herself, she went and fetched a novel. It might be escapism but for now she had no better ideas.
Sunday started a little better. There was breakfast to be made for the exhausted âsleepovers' before ferrying them home. Somehow the tradition of keeping Sunday as a family day had persisted amongst the twins and their friends. Then there was the dog to walk, through a muggy, damp, cold day, which seemed to tell you that the sun would probably not shine for a few months yet. There was lunch to cook, a traditional roast, of course. There were school clothes to be ironed before a classic serial on the television.
But even through all the normal busy jobs, the empty feeling would not leave her.
She was glad to return to work on the Monday morning, aware that March was slipping away. The bulbs were peering out of the soil and any moment now the trees would start to turn green. She locked her car and stood, looking up at the office building, a large Victorian property to the south of the town. She'd worked here for fourteen years now, handled death after death, âhappy releases', tragedy, murders, accidents, suicides and natural death. She'd spent time considering them all and explaining them, as best she could, to relatives who were sometimes angry, sometimes grief-struck and occasionally relieved â though they invariably tried to hide that one. There were mysteries and misadventures. A few had remained puzzles. Would this be one of those? Would there ever be a satisfactory explanation to these two cases of arson which had resulted in three deaths and, so far, one disappearance? Would there be more arson attacks? Had something terrible and destructive been unleashed? Shiva, the Hindu god of destruction.
She approached the door, still reflecting. No one could call death in a burning home misadventure and certainly not a âhappy release'. And the missing nurse? Would she ever turn up? Would she remain forever a mystery or would there be a banal explanation?
Why the fire then, Martha reasoned, so carefully laid, so quickly destructive? Why the fire which had drawn attention to
her,
suggested a connection between two families when there might have appeared none?
Someone
wanted to draw attention to the link between the two families, even if it was little more than a silken line, fine as a spider's web. And now Martha sat perfectly still, convinced that she was tiptoeing around a pool, deep and dark but not bottomless. In her mind she was leaning in towards it, peering down into waters that had no reflection. Yet.
She shook herself and walked inside.
The hallway of the coroner's office had deliberately been left unspoilt, terrazzo tiles, a high, moulded ceiling, panelling halfway up the walls. It had the power to dwarf and overawe which, in a way, it was meant to. The coroner represents the crown, the law and justice at its most solemn and there was never a time when Martha was not aware of this status. Except . . . she sometimes bent the rules just a little to allow herself to pursue her own investigations â off the record, of course.
Downstairs were offices for clerical and secretarial staff.
Her office and Jericho's were on the first floor, up a wide and sweeping staircase carpeted with a narrow red stair carpet held by polished brass rods.
Without any idea of what had been passing through her mind Jericho Palfreyman, Coroners' Officer, greeted her as normal. She enquired whether there was any news in the double arson case.