IN the morning, Finney left for work looking distracted and hurried. Neither of us was in a mood to revisit the conversation of the night before. I checked my e-mail and found a message from my mother after several days of silence.
The sun is getting to me. It is doing things to me I wouldn’t have thought possible. It’s Peeling something away, and easing my joints, and Soothing the aches and pains of Old Age, smoothing out the wrinkles like a hot iron. I walk around barefoot, and the earth burns through the soles of my feet. Apparently they don’t smoke cannabis here as much as they used to, which is a great Pity. Nevertheless, London is receding to the edges of my consciousness, my Daughters and my darling Grandchildren are secure in my Heart, of course, but I have to admit that you’re not uppermost in my Mind. I am being challenged—so I am told—not to Think, but to Feel.
There is a great change in circumstances here. I’ve told you all about my friend Nancy. As you might remember, she is married to Nate, but I discovered when I got here that, although they have the same address, they are both with new partners. Nancy has taken a Lesbian lover called DeeDee, and Nate has a Boyfriend—a sixty-year-old boy—called Clark. DeeDee and Clark were previously living together as man and wife, but they have Swapped Partners!!! The two Men live together in the attic, the two Women live in a garden house, and they all get Together for dinner. I have been on the lookout for problems—Surely there must be Problems—but so far I have detected only Peace and Light.
The Subject of your father came up in conversation at lunch the other day. I was asked by Nancy, after I had spoken briefly on the subject, whether he—your father—had any Redeeming Feature. I said No, and she and DeeDee looked at me with Pity. Does he love anything or anyone? DeeDee asked. I told them I didn’t know and then I’m afraid I said I didn’t really Care. I am sure I set back my Personal Transformation by weeks. But I’m right, aren’t I, that he has no Redeeming Feature?
I read and reread, reveling in the vision of my mother in California. But the bit about my father unsettled me. My mother had never before wavered in her silent contempt for my father. It wasn’t clear that she was wavering now, but I found her uncertainty disconcerting, and it stayed with me all day long.
I went to the office, where I made arrangements for Majorca. A sixteen-year-old schoolgirl had last been seen there in a nightclub in the early hours of the morning two months earlier. Her three friends only realized the next day that she was gone, and when she failed to turn up for their flight home, they became alarmed. Local police had been looking for her ever since, but her parents seemed to have spent more energy quarreling than looking for their daughter. Then I had a call from reception, saying that Justin was downstairs, did I have a moment to see him?
I glanced around the room. Sal was out of the country, Penny had gone with him, and our usual bevy of camera operators had taken up their cameras and walked off. I wanted very much to speak to Justin, and to speak to him in privacy. But to bring him here, into this office, would only remind him that I was a journalist and that he should watch what he said.
“Okay, I’ll come and get him,” I said.
He was sitting on a sofa in reception, his crutches propped up next to him. He greeted me with an anxious smile, and I thought how strange it was that he shared his father’s pale beauty but that his facial expressions came from somewhere else. It could only have been his dead mother, I guessed, who had smiled with that worried, lopsided smile. When Justin greeted me with an apology, I thought that must have been his mother, too. I couldn’t imagine Kes ever apologizing. I had seen Kes’s defense of Mike, his refusal to let his friend be harassed by me. Justin, by contrast, seemed to spend his life in a perpetual cower.
“I’m sorry to disturb you,” Justin said, struggling to his feet.
“No problem. Come on,” I told him, “I’ll show you around.”
He shook his head, frustrated. “I don’t want a tour, I just want to talk.”
I signed him in and suggested coffee from the cafeteria, but he didn’t want that, either. So I took him up to the office. I cleared off Sal’s comfortable leather chair—there was a pair of socks on it that I assumed belonged to Sal—and Justin sat down awkwardly. I asked about his leg, and he said it was still hurting, but it was clear he didn’t want to talk about that, either. I shouldn’t have worried about taking him to the office; he seemed to be completely unaware of his surroundings.
“I came to apologize for . . . well, for the way Dad spoke to you. He just wanted to do things right by Mike. And . . . Mike’s really angry with you. He thinks it’s because of you that the police are questioning him again.”
Justin looked at me questioningly, wanting me to deny it. When I didn’t, he pushed some more.
“When Mike came back from the police station, he slammed the door and went up to Dad’s flat, and I could hear Mike shouting about you, and how it’s because of you that the police won’t let him alone. He was shouting like he wanted to kill you. Dad was telling him to shut up and get a grip, but once Mike’s got something in his head, he doesn’t let up. Everything is black and white to him, there’s wrong and there’s right, and what you did was wrong.”
He paused again, and again I didn’t say anything.
“Is it because of you?” he asked eventually, forced by my silence to state his question bluntly. “I mean, I’d like to defend you, you’re my friend. So if it’s got nothing to do with you, I should say that to them. But . . .”
He shook his head slowly. I was touched that he wanted to defend me, but I felt guilty, too. If this wounded boy stepped up against Mike and Kes, they would make mincemeat of him. And how real was this friendship Justin was claiming with me? I had befriended him largely because I wanted to get closer to Mike. Justin was a source. It was I who was deriving the net gain from our relationship, in terms of knowledge. Even now, hearing how angry Mike was with me, I was glad to have the information, grateful for the insight into Mike’s head. To me it indicated a man who was cornered. I deserved nothing from Justin in the way of loyalty.
“Look, I can’t tell the police what to do,” I told him. “When they realized Mike had met Melanie before, they had to find out why he hadn’t told them. That’s why they’re questioning him. If he’d been straight with them in the first place, this wouldn’t have happened. But whatever you do, don’t say that to them. Mike’s just angry with me because he doesn’t want to be angry with himself. Just stay out of it.”
Justin searched my eyes. “So it was you who told the police?”
I thought I had finessed this point, but I’m a hopeless liar. I nodded.
Justin shook his head, reached for his crutches, and got up. “Well, all I can say is you should be careful,” he said impatiently, “because Mike is really, really pissed at you. And he was trained to kill people with his bare hands.”
I couldn’t help smiling, it sounded so melodramatic.
“Really”—Justin was hurt—“Dad’s always telling me how Mike was lookout one night, and he killed this man who was creeping up on their jeep with a grenade in his hand.”
“Okay,” I told him, holding up my hand, “I’ll be careful.”
Justin nodded, satisfied.
“Has Mike talked to you about what happened out there, when he met Melanie?”
“You think he talks to me about things like that?”
“Why don’t you ask your dad?” I suggested. “Mike might have told him.”
“Why should I care what happened?” Justin asked.
“Forget it,” I told him. Which was easier than answering, “Because you’re my source, and I want you to do some digging for me.”
Once Justin had gone, moving slowly down the corridor, I stared out the window until I saw him emerge six floors below and make his way along the street. It was raining again, and the uneven pavement had turned into a delta of pools and puddles. I rang Beatrice.
“Remind me what happened to the things Melanie had with her at HazPrep,” I said.
“I have them here,” she told me. “The police went through everything, then a woman called Lin from the Corporation packed it all up and Ivor Collins brought it to us here.”
“Lin Pala packed it up?”
“I think so. We talked on the phone.”
“Was there anything missing?”
“Well . . . it’s difficult to tell, since I don’t know what she had with her. The only thing I asked Lin about was Melanie’s mobile phone. . . . I know it sounds silly, but she never went anywhere without it.”
“Then she must have had it with her,” I said. I remembered Bentley and Finney discussing the final electronic signal logged by the transmitter, speculating that either the phone’s battery ran out or the phone itself was switched off. It was too dire an image to share with Beatrice.
“Yes,” her mother agreed, sounding suddenly tired, “she probably did.”
I knew what she was thinking. If Melanie had her phone with her, there was even more reason not to vanish. It meant nothing, of course, but one’s mind can concoct the most far-fetched scenarios: What if Melanie had forgotten her mobile, lost her way in the woods, lost her memory, had no cash for a pay phone? Then she might be lost, and she might return. But she’d had her mobile with her. Why, then, had she not rung?
I remembered Andrew Bentley at HazPrep suggesting that Melanie had gone outside for a cigarette or to make a phone call because of the bad reception inside the building. I wondered if the police knew what calls she had made that night or those she’d received.
“Have you heard any more from Stella?” I asked.
“No,” Beatrice said, “not since you were here. I think she’s gone back to Germany.”
I thought, as I hung up, that would be the last we would hear of Stella’s allegations.
For the rest of the day, I tried to put it all out of my mind. I should be leaving Melanie to the police now. I had done what I could—perhaps I had done more than I should. Pointing the police in the direction of Mike Darling might do nothing more than mislead the investigation and harm Darling. The combination of Darling’s phone call and Justin’s warning made me realize how close to the breaking point Darling was. I would, I decided, divert myself. That night I read through my mother’s e-mail again and thought of what she had written about my father.
“No,” I murmured to myself, “he has no Redeeming Feature.”
I felt as though I was betraying my mother, letting her live in happy ignorance on the other side of the world while her former husband with no Redeeming Feature lived in her house. That night, before I fell asleep, I decided I had to put a stop to it. I had booked the next day off. I would spend the morning with my children, and in the afternoon I would evict my father.