The postcard from Karen arrived on the Monday morning just before Rina and Tim left for his audition. Rina separated it quickly from the rest of the post and slipped it into her bag. A quick glance showed a view of Frantham promenade. The irony of that amused her.
‘Do you have everything, Tim?’ For once, he didn’t have his carrier bags crammed with equipment.
‘Oh yes, I’m fine. I’ve got me and a few props. Marvello is ready.’
Behind him she could see the entire household, a twitter with excitement, crowding into the hallway ready to see him off. And they’re right, she thought, this is quite a big thing for Tim. She stroked the little watch she had put on especially for the occasion. Truthfully, the strap was a bit tight now and the tiny, elongated face had looked better on the younger, slimmer woman she had been when her beloved Fred had given it to her, but it would be unthinkable not to wear it on a day like today. Her good luck talisman, both for Tim’s performance and for the meeting Duggan had arranged with a certain Mr Randall, something about which made Rina uneasy and apprehensive. She chided herself for letting her imagination get the better of her and then stroked the watch again, listening for Fred’s voice in her head, telling her that it would all be fine.
She was disturbed to find that even Fred’s ghostly memory seemed determined upon silence today.
Tim opened the car door for her then waved gaily to the rest of the Martin family and they were on their way.
‘You seem in good spirits anyway,’ she said.
‘Oh, I feel pretty confident today. I hope it’s not ill-founded. But you, my dear Rina, you seem far from fine and what did I see you hiding in your rather formidable bag?’
‘You don’t miss much, do you?’ Rina hauled the bag from the footwell on to her lap. It was, she supposed, rather large, but she felt the need to carry a great deal with her. It wasn’t, she thought, so much a handbag as an emergency survival kit. Her niece, a mother of three, had once emptied the contents of hers on to Rina’s table, attempting to find some small object that had slipped to the bottom. Rina had been amused at the assortment of sticking plasters and toy cars and spare underwear in case of accidents, but on reflection, she was no more restrained. You never knew when you might need sticky tape or insect repellent and recently she had even given in and bought a mobile phone – though she tended to think of it as an electronic dog lead and she switched it off more often than it was on.
‘So,’ Tim asked her, ‘what were you hiding from our family of inquisitors?’
‘It’s the postcard from Karen. She must have bought it before she left. Look.’
Tim glanced sideways and chuckled to himself. ‘Always prepared,’ he said. ‘She’d have made a great boy scout. What does she say?’
‘Well, it’s really for George,’ Rina said, hesitating to read it.
‘And George will tell you anyway, and every postman between here and wherever she posted it will have had a gander so …’
‘I suppose so. She doesn’t say much really, only that he’s not to worry, that she’s fine and seeing a lot of new things and that she’ll be in touch. Not a lot she could say really, is there?’
‘No,’ Tim agreed. ‘Oh, it’s such a nasty business, Rina. Makes you despair.’
‘Well, you’d better not do too much of that, we’re here. Time to shine, Marvello.’
Rina watched from the back of the ballroom as Marvello performed. She was impressed. He really had seemed to hit his stride. The hotel wanted close-up magic, table to table and Tim had risen to the challenge with just a pack of cards and a set of spirit measures borrowed from the bar. A nice touch, she thought. She moved closer as he drew to the close of his presentation, a little fearful for him now he was at the most difficult point of his act. He produced a battered old book from his pocket and handed it to the manager. Invited him to open it at any page and make a note of the page number and a short phrase written there.
Marvello turned his back, staring with exaggerated interest at the view out of the large seaward windows.
‘You are ready? The book is closed and everything is written down? Might I ask you now to put your note into your pocket and keep it there?’
Once that was done, Marvello turned. He touched the book and closed his eyes, concentrating. ‘Ah yes,’ he said. ‘I think I see.’
Opening his eyes he studied the manager. ‘I think,’ he said, ‘that it is a page between twenty and twenty-five … No! Don’t say. In fact, I think it is a page between twenty and twenty-three, so twenty-two. No, no, it is in fact page twenty-three and I think …’ He screwed up his eyes momentarily. ‘Ah, yes, it’s clearer now. The phrase you have chosen is halfway down the page, in fact no, it’s right at the bottom of the page, a little line all on its own and it says … it says: “watching Jack”. Yes, “watching Jack”.’
Marvello rather spoiled the effect then, by grinning broadly. The manager withdrew the slip of paper from his jacket and revealed what he had written.
‘Page twenty-three, bottom line and it is indeed, “watching Jack”.’
‘Well,’ Tim said. ‘I thought that went rather well. What did you think?’
‘Nice,’ Rina told him. ‘Very cleanly done. When did they say they’d let you know?’
‘Oh, he did the usual thing about having a couple more acts to see, which is nonsense, of course. And they’ll let me know tomorrow.’ He sighed, suddenly deflated. ‘What if they say no, Rina? What if I really can’t hack it?’
She reached over and patted his arm. ‘You were good, Tim, very smooth and the close-up stuff is where you’re at your best.’
Tim snorted. ‘Needs must,’ he said. ‘It takes fewest props and costs less in set-up. As a kid I saved my pocket money for weeks, buying shitty illusions out of the back of comic books, then my dad bought me a book on card magic and I never looked back. I like doing this stuff. It’s close and intimate and it’s shared, somehow. That feels good, Rina, but I swear, if I don’t get this job, I’m giving up and it won’t be just the clown suit going on the bonfire. I’ll settle down, get a proper job.’
‘And what would you do?’ Rina asked him gently. ‘What will you do that you can give your heart to?’
Tim said nothing, he just gripped the wheel very tightly and stared hard at the road ahead.
Midmorning Mac got a call from his old boss and by the time he’d replaced the receiver he was trembling, visibly.
‘What the hell was that about?’ Sergeant Baker demanded. ‘You’ve gone white.’ He pulled out a chair and forced Mac to sit down.
‘There’s been a sighting,’ he said. ‘A possible break on the Cara Evans case.’
Baker was nonplussed for a moment, then remembered that Mac had a life before Frantham. ‘Something that happened in your last job?’
Mac nodded; he had forgotten that the name was not common currency, that Eden had read his case file, but his reasons for leaving his last position were not widely known.
‘A little girl was kidnapped and then killed. Cara Evans. She was six. We’ve had no leads. Nothing for months, but there’s been a sighting of her killer and it’s been verified. He was caught on CCTV.’ He couldn’t bring himself to say that he’d been there when she’d been killed.
‘Good news then?’ Frank Baker approved. ‘Good they’re keeping you in the loop.’ Often, you moved on, you lost touch with open cases. ‘Nasty, the way these things circle back to bite you though, isn’t it?’
Mac was puzzled. Baker elaborated, unaware of just what deep wounds he probed. ‘Kidnap, murder. You leave one behind and land yourself with another load.’
‘Patrick Duggan was a lot older than Cara Evans,’ Mac pointed out.
‘It’s still somebody’s kid though, isn’t it? My Andrea’s twenty-seven, but she’s still my little girl, never mind that she’s got two of her own.’
Mac nodded. He’d felt elated at the news that at last there had been a breakthrough in the Cara Evans case but now Baker’s comment, ‘Still somebody’s child’, resonated through his mind. Depression settled about him like thick fog as he went through to give Eden the news.
The house belonging to Thomas Randall was set well back from the road down a half-mile long drive. It was a Victorian building, Rina guessed, assuming also from the look of the outbuildings that it had once been a farm with a high wall running around the main buildings and wrought-iron gates facing the drive.
Cameras atop the gateposts scrutinized their car as they approached, swivelling to get a better look as Tim got out and pressed the speaker button inset in the right-hand post.
‘Rina Martin and Tim Brandon to see Mr Randall,’ he said.
The gate clicked and cracked and then began to move. Tim scooted back into the car and eased it forward. ‘He likes his privacy.’
Rina nodded, her earlier apprehension returning and building. ‘He’s either a man with a lot to hide or a great deal to defend.’
‘Or both. Oh well, deep breath and on with the performance.’
Beside him, Rina nodded grimly wondering just how this next act was going to be played.
Two men greeted them in the hallway. Airport-style scanners had been installed, recessed into the oak panels on either side of the door. Rina handed her bag over, glad, for some reason, that she had left the postcard in the car. Tim set off the scanner twice. Car keys and a nest of little cups tucked into the pocket of his jacket, this second discovery causing raised eyebrows and puzzled looks. Rina decided she wasn’t going to explain but she was interested that Tim had obviously decided on the fly to use hotel equipment for his performance. She approved; using props that were not his further misdirected his audience and just added to the sense of mystery. It showed he was thinking about the context and not just the magic.
Both of Randall’s men were armed, she was sure of that. Their tailor could have been better, she thought. All this money around and second-rate jackets; that seemed unnecessarily sloppy.
Randall diminished in her estimation.
Diminishing him made her feel ever so slightly better, though no less wary.
‘Come along in,’ a voice invited from a half-open door just off the wide hallway. ‘Sorry for all the fuss, but these days you never know.’
‘Mr Randall, I presume.’
‘The same.’
Randall’s suit was better cut, she decided she’d allow him that. He was a slender man, a few inches taller than Rina and with dark hair that she was certain had been dyed. Carefully done and expertly cut, but if the intent was to make him look less than his years then she regarded it as having failed. She placed him in his sixties, but trying his best to remain at forty-five. She found herself comparing him to James Duggan. Their suits and haircuts probably cost the same, though she guessed Duggan was the younger of the two – and he didn’t try to conceal his age. But, whereas Duggan would always look like a well-dressed grifter who’d never quite shed the poverty of his ancestral roots, Randall exuded wealth and education. Though not class, she thought. No, class was something else again.
‘Some set-up you have here,’ Tim said and Rina pulled her attention away from the man and scanned the room. A bank of CCTV cameras filled one wall, computer equipment using up a fair complement of a second. Large, square bay windows, complete with their original shutters folded back into a recess, gave a view of what was now a walled garden but which Rina guessed had originally faced out across open countryside. But it was the final wall that drew Rina’s gaze.
‘Take a look,’ Randall invited.
Rina looked. A large-scale map of the UK was scattered with red pins. Some of those pins had threads linking them, others had threads leading off on to the cork board that completely covered this fourth wall. Pictures and handwritten details sat next to computer printouts which sidled up to references and file names that, Rina guessed, referred to folders on the computer system. The odd press clipping added texture to the display and the whole gave the impression of being an art installation in one of the posh London galleries Rina took pleasure in misunderstanding whenever she took a trip to the capital.
Rina counted the red pins. Seventeen. She examined the dates and names noting that some names occurred more than once. She squinted hard at the photographs, some looked like family snapshots, some clipped from magazines, a few looked like the kind of formal picture still beloved of school photographers. At last she turned to Randall.
‘Are you certain about all of this?’
He shook his head. ‘A half-dozen cases are still unverified because the families deny anything happened. They’re afraid of what they might be threatened with if they come out in the open. But, as certain as I can be there have been at least a dozen abductions, maybe more.’
Rina frowned, looking again at the names and dates, the implications sinking in. ‘Some families were targeted twice. Is that right, or am I misreading?’
‘No, you’re not misreading. In the case of three families, different family members were taken. Each was returned, each time the price demanded was increased. You see, the abductors are clever. They might terrify or even injure, but, provided the families cooperate, pay up, stay silent, they get their child or their mother or their sister or brother. Whoever, and the pattern is, shall we say, eclectic, they get them back, more or less intact. And if a spell in “therapy”, as our American cousins would call it, is required, well there’s generally still enough in the family coffers to pay for that. So far, no one has been bankrupted, though in one case it’s come close.’
The family that Duggan had mentioned that had trouble paying, Rina thought. ‘Was that you, Mr Randall?’
He scowled. ‘I’d hit a tight patch,’ he said. ‘But I’m over that now.’
‘I suppose,’ Rina said, ‘that it wouldn’t be in the interests of the kidnappers to completely bankrupt anyone. Not if they want to keep everything as quiet as possible. A wealthy family that suddenly loses its wealth will attract attention. A loss, even a substantial one, can be covered up, blamed on a blip in the stock market or a bad deal, but one that turns up its toes completely is likely to be investigated somewhere along the line. These people are clever. They take as much as their targets can stand to lose and still remain viable and, in some cases at least, the fact that they are still financially healthy means they can be targeted again. How long has this been going on? James Duggan made a guess at two years, but an operation this large; it has to have been longer than that.’
Randall nodded. ‘My estimate is closer to three,’ he said. ‘My own child was targeted eighteen months ago. I tried to call their bluff. To encourage full cooperation, they removed a finger, sent it to me recorded delivery. I had to sign for my son’s finger.
‘After I got him back, I sent my wife and child away and threw everything I could into tracking these bastards down. It has consumed me, Mrs Martin. Utterly.’
‘And how far have you got with it? Do you know who’s behind it?’ Tim was still taking in the scale of proceedings. ‘Have the demands escalated over time? What sort of failure rate have they had?’
‘One question at a time,’ Rina told him. She looked expectantly at Randall.
‘Sit down, please.’ He directed them to a sofa set in the window bay, took a number of files from a nearby cabinet and handed them to Rina before pulling up a chair.
‘The main man, I have come to believe, is Travis Haines. This is only one of his many names and one of his equally numerous occupations. Mercenary, arms dealer, trader in blood diamonds which is how, incidentally, I first ran across him. I freely admit I’m no innocent, Mrs Martin,’ he pointed out. ‘No one on that list is clean, that’s what makes them such excellent targets. For one reason or another, they all have something to hide; something that makes them want to keep the authorities at arm’s length, additional to the simple desire to keep their loved ones alive.’
Rina flipped open the folder. She was beginning to feel as though she’d slipped back into the role as Lydia Marchant, television sleuth.
‘That’s Travis Haines.’ The picture, Rina thought, had the look of something taken with a long lens. A candid shot with little depth of field. As though reading her thoughts Randall continued, ‘He’s notoriously camera shy. In fact the only other pictures I could track down were taken by the security forces in Northern Ireland at the height of the Troubles. Then he did a stint in the Gulf, first time round and also in the early stages of this war.’
‘Selling arms?’ Rina asked.
‘I believe so. Arms and information. Things seem to have become a little hot for him and he came back home, looked for a new opening. It’s my belief that the idea for the abductions must have come to him while he was in the Middle East. Kidnapping for profit is practically a business in Iraq, just as it was in Beirut in the bad old days.’
‘I had an uncle in Beirut,’ Tim mused. He took the sheets Rina had already examined and skimmed through. They elaborated slightly on what Randall had just told them.
‘The second folder contains what we know about his team. One face will be familiar, but of course, he’s now dead.’
‘Edward Parker,’ Rina said, glancing at the photographs and brief biographies. She recognized a second face, but said nothing and hoped Tim would follow her silent lead. So, blond-haired man’s name was Coran, was it? Rina and Tim had only encountered him briefly, there on the cliff top when Edward Parker had brought George to them, intending to trade his daughter’s life for that of his son. Rina and Tim had both done their stint with the police artist; Coran was not in the system.
Ex-army and, Randall suspected, according to the notes he had made, Special Forces, probably, given the circles in which his boss, Travis Haines, moved. Rina scanned what was known about his background and family but it wasn’t much, taking up only a couple of lines and amounting to the fact that he had no close kin and his only close associates were ex-services. She wondered how high up in Haines’s organization he was.
Over the page were another half-dozen pictures and potted bios. They could, Rina thought, almost have been interchangeable and split into roughly two groups. Those whose background was security and those for whom it had been crime. At the bottom of the page was a bald man with pale-grey eyes. He had to be the man George had seen with Coran. She read his entry, mentally noting his name, age and background and then set the folder aside. Tim, noting that she had not handed it to him, made no move to pick it up. Rina breathed a sigh of thanks that he could take a hint.
‘So,’ she said, ‘where does all this lead? What are you doing about it?’
Randall hesitated. It didn’t seem to be a question he had expected. He had expected pure adulation for what he’d achieved, Rina guessed, not questions. Not doubt.
Abruptly, he got to his feet and took the folders back to the cabinet. ‘There have been rumours,’ he said sharply, ‘recent developments.’ He took a picture from the top of the cabinet and handed it to Rina.
He hadn’t intended on showing us this, she thought. He’s looking for praise. Odd, she thought, just how many control freaks and megalomaniacs needed praise for nourishment. She studied the picture of the two little girls. A school photo. The pair were in uniform and she took careful note of the badge on their blazers. They were twins, seven or eight years old and very much alike, separated only by an additional dimple and a slightly lighter shade of blue in one pair of smiling eyes.
‘When were they taken?’
‘We believe about a week ago. The parents are in denial, say they’re staying with relatives but we know the school was told they were both sick. The parents have barely left the house. They’re waiting for the call. So far, it hasn’t come. But that’s what Haines does. He waits. He builds the tension almost to breaking and then he offers a deal. By then, most people would do or give anything.’
Most people, Rina thought. Randall had tried to hold out. Had he really sent his wife and child away, she wondered, or had she taken the boy away from him? Rina knew she would be in the category of a parent ready to do any kind of deal, no hesitation or question; what sort of man tried to bargain? What sort of man would think he could bluff? What had happened in this quiet, structured, security-ridden house on the day his son’s finger had arrived with the morning post?
And that begged another question. ‘Mr Randall, how did they get your son? I mean, this house is practically a fortress.’
He took the picture from her. ‘It wasn’t always like this,’ he said. ‘We bought this place so he had room to play, space to ride that damned pony she insisted he needed. To throw balls for the bloody dog. Space, that was what she said a kid needed and I went along with it. I married late, she was younger, wanted children and I thought, all right, my child will have whatever it needs. So we bought this place, thinking it would be safe. Safe! I wish I’d never set eyes on it.’
‘And yet you stay?’
Randall’s eyes narrowed. ‘And yet I stay.’ He seemed to come to a decision then. He grabbed a notepad from the top of the filing cabinet and scribbled something down, then handed it to Rina. ‘Duggan seemed to think you might be useful,’ he said. ‘Frankly, I doubt it, but there’s the name and address of the twins’ parents. See if you can talk sense into them. I need all the families to talk to me, tell me all the little bits and scraps of information they don’t even know they know. Then, maybe, we can track him down and nail the bastard.’
Rina took the paper without looking at it and slipped it into her bag. ‘You stay,’ she said, ‘because everything points to Haines being based down here. Because you’ve had the most sightings of him and his team in this area. Because with a fast boat he could be anywhere along the coast or even across the channel in a matter of hours. It makes sense for him to be here so you stay and wait for him to make a mistake.’
‘Maybe I do,’ he acknowledged.
One of his men had appeared in the doorway and they took it this was their cue to leave. Silently, Tim swung the car around and headed back towards the gate. He didn’t speak until they’d reached the main road and then when he opened his mouth to say something, Rina gestured silence, finger planted firmly on her lip.
‘I think I need a cup of tea,’ she said. ‘And a sit down and a good think.’
Tim nodded. ‘Right you are,’ he said. ‘You think he’s right about the twins?’ He looked at her: was this a safe subject?
‘Poor little buggers,’ Rina said. She nodded. It would seem strange if they stayed off the subject altogether.
‘And what do you think of Randall?’
Rina smiled. ‘He’s a man used to getting his own way,’ she said. ‘And I do wonder as to the truth of things when he says he sent his wife and child away. I think she left him. Took the little boy and went. Can you imagine trying to raise a child in a place like that?’ She reached forward and turned the radio on, playing with the channels until finding something Tim thought must be Bach. He winced as she increased the volume, laughed out loud as he noticed the look of mischief on her face.
‘You think he bugged my car, don’t you?’ Tim stated as she unlocked the door at Peverill Lodge.
‘The postcard. Karen’s postcard. It had been moved and our friend Randall does seem to have a penchant for things electronic.’
‘How are we going to find out for sure?’
‘That,’ Rina told him, ‘is why we have a pet policeman.’