rang.
âI might be a bit late. Iâm going to give James a hand for a while longer but with something that isnât really anything to do with the case as heâs snowed under. And Alex has had some photos she took when we first met emailed from London by a friend. As they include some of the rectory and Mum and Dad I thought Iâd take a look at them with a view to having them ourselves.â
âThatâs fine. You and I can eat later,â I said.
âNo, itâs all right. You have yours with the family. Iâll have a pie and a pint, or something.â
I was stung to say, âBut surely she could email them to you .â
âShe says she doesnât know how to. See you later.â
I did not throw my mobile across the room after this conversation, it doesnât like it.
âBut she runs an agency of some kind,â I heard myself say out loud. âA business . How can she not know . . . ?â
âThe house ownerâs nephewâs name is David Bennett,â Patrick said, coming into the kitchen where I was having an early breakfast. âHe was due back from New Zealand last week but for some reason hasnât shown up.â
âHow did you find that out?â I enquired.
âI leaned on the solicitors handling the sale. The SOCA ID card seemed to do the trick.â
He had arrived home at a little after ten the previous night, apparently looking very tired â I was writing, or trying to, and had not seen him come in â had not had his usual chat with his father, and then gone to bed. By the time I had gone up he had been fast asleep.
âDid you find out anything else about him?â I asked. âDâyou want toast?â
âPlease. Yes, he has dual British and New Zealand nationality and goes out there quite a lot where it would appear he has business interests.â
I fixed the toast.
Buttering busily Patrick then went on to say, âWhile itâs still iffy whether Irma and Imelda Burnside are the same person or not I think Iâll go up to London later this morning and work from HQ. Carrickâs happy for me to meet this man at the airport and interview him there if I can find out when he plans to return to the UK. It will be easier to do that checking from London too.â
âBetter intelligence?â
âOf course. Provincial forces simply donât have the resources SOCA does.â
âYou wonât be able to arrest him though.â
âNo, unless he refuses to answer questions.â
I sat down at the kitchen table opposite to him and regarded him steadily. Then I said, âWhat were the photos like?â
He looked a bit blank for a few seconds. âOh, those. Theyâre not very good. She takes lousy pictures, chopping off peopleâs feet and heads. I donât think Iâll bother with them.â
âIt was all a bit of a con then.â
He loaded on marmalade. âNo, not really. There were a couple of good ones of the village street.â
I carried on gazing at him. It was a bit like having a remote control with flat batteries and the TV channel would not change.
He glanced up, mid-spread and our eyes locked.
I said, âYou know, up until now I really thought you werenât like other men. Silly of me.â
âWhat dâyou mean?â
âIâd thought you were of above average intelligence too.â
He dropped his gaze and shrugged.
âWhere are you, Patrick?â I asked softly.
He said nothing.
âSheâs reduced you to this,â I said. âSheâs taken my husband, the man I love more than anyone in the world and brought him down to this level; ordinary, sheepish, just any old bloke in the street. Itâs a disease. Itâs a kind of character POX!â
I had bellowed the last word and he actually jumped.
I went on, âI donât know whether we were talking about houses, or husbands, but
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