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“I’m looking for him.”

“Oh yeh?”

“And I was hoping you might be able to-”

“Like I told the fuzz, I haven’t a clue where he is.”

“Naturally you’d say that to the police, Mrs. Peters. But I’m not the police.”

“No? Well, maybe there’s worse than them looking for our Vince. Even if I knew where he was-which I don’t-I wouldn’t tell the likes of you. What are you? Debt collector? Private detective? Bit of both?”

“Nothing of the kind. I was a witness at Shaun Naylor’s trial and this latest turn of events has put me in a difficult position. Just like Vince.”

“I don’t know what you’re talking about.”

“Come on, Mrs. Peters. Why has Vince gone to ground? If he was telling the truth at the trial, he has nothing to fear. And if the police put words into his mouth, he wouldn’t be running away from them, would he? So, somebody else must have put him up to it. I’d like to find out who that was.”

“I still don’t know what you’re talking about.”

“I think you do. But never mind. Just tell Vince-”

“I can’t tell him anything. I don’t know where he is.”

“I might be able to help him.”

“Pull the other one.”

“All right. I might be able to reward him. If he turns out to have some valuable information. I gather he’s out of a job at the moment. Maybe he needs some spare cash.”

“Don’t we all?”

“Quite.” The hostility in her gaze had fractionally diminished, allowing the hint of a proposition to emerge. “Well, if a little… money… would help you remember where Vince said he was going…”

“You have a bloody nerve, you do.” Her face flushed red with rage. “If I was ready to sell my own brother down the river for a few quid, I’d be up Soho, wouldn’t I, waggling my tits at men like you, not stuck here, working my fingers to the bone just so-” She broke off and turned away, leaning against the kitchen doorway for support as she chewed at her thumbnail. She was angry at Vince as well as me, I sensed. Maybe she was even angry at her own loyalty. “Why don’t you just piss off?” she murmured.

“All right. I’ll go. But here’s my card.” I took one from my pocket, wrote my home telephone number on the back and slid it towards her across the table that stood between us. “Tell Vince what I said… if you see him.” She glanced down at the card, but made no move to pick it up. My impression was that when she did, it would only be to throw it in the bin. But at least I’d given her the option. In the circumstances, it was the most I could hope to achieve.

Sharon Peters’ flat was at the far end of a second-floor walkway. As I retraced my steps along it, I glanced down into the courtyard below, noting with some relief that my car was still where I’d left it, complete with four wheels.

A young woman emerged from the stairwell ahead of me as I looked up and strode swiftly towards me, high heels clacking. She was thin and slightly stooped, with dark curly hair framing a pale gaunt-featured face. Her clothes were market-stall haute couture: a black imitation leather coat several sizes too big for her over a striped sweater and red mini-skirt. Her eyes met mine for a fraction of a second as we passed. Something close to recognition flickered in her gaze and stirred in my mind. Then both of us seemed to dismiss the thought and hurry on.

But by the time I’d reached the head of the stairs, the faint impression of familiarity had revived. I stopped and looked back along the walkway. She was standing outside Sharon Peters’ door, staring at me over her shoulder as she rang the bell. She frowned. I could sense her thinking what I was thinking: who is that? Then the door opened and she stepped inside, smiling briskly. The door closed. And I was alone. With the answer slipping from my grasp.

CHAPTER NINETEEN

I combined my visit to Cambridge with a long-overdue tour of willow suppliers in Suffolk and Essex. This kept me away from the office for most of the following week, which was something of a bonus, since Adrian was due back from Australia halfway through my absence and was sure to think I was deliberately avoiding him.

Cambridge turned out to hold no more clues than Chamonix to the secrets of Paul Bryant’s soul. Even if he’d revealed anything of himself to Doctor Olive Meyer, I doubt she’d have noticed. She wasn’t exactly the sensitive type. Largely as a favour to Sarah, however, she did give me the name of a third-year student who’d roomed next to Paul in his first year. But Jake Hobson, when I finally tracked him down in the college bar after a lengthy vigil outside his Romsey Town lodgings, had difficulty even remembering what Paul looked like. “Hardly said two words to him all year, mate. He was a closed book to me.” In that, I reckoned, Jake was unlikely to have been alone.

So, once more, like a laboratory mouse in a maze, I was back where I’d begun. I stood on the riverside path opposite the Garden House Hotel, imagining Louise walking towards me through the chill October mist as she’d walked towards Paul through the warm June sunshine. I went to the gallery where they’d met that momentous March night and strolled past the pale still lives that had succeeded Bantock’s blood-bright daubings. I paced the courts of King’s College and wondered why I couldn’t see her, as Paul had, rounding a corner or looking down, half in fear and half in temptation, from a high window. But the past didn’t lie like the yellowing leaves about me, waiting to be gathered. It kept its distance. One step behind. Or ahead.

I got back to Greenhayes on Thursday night, at a loss to know what I should do next. But there, obligingly, the answer was waiting, among the bills and junk mail on the doormat. A visiting order from Albany Prison, authorizing me to pay a call on Shaun Andrew Naylor of E Wing any afternoon during the next four weeks. There and then I decided to go the following day. Delay wasn’t going to make the encounter any easier. Urgency just might.

It was another apple-crisp autumn day, with the Solent like a millpond and the cosy countryside of the Island bathed in golden light. But Albany was still a prison with a high wall and a locked gate. And the cramped foyer I waited in with the other visitors still contrived to preserve, like an essence in the air, the closeness of confinement, the claustrophobic reality of long-term imprisonment. Naylor had served just over three years of a twenty-year sentence. Standing there with the wives, girlfriends, mothers and children, I began to wonder, for the very first time, what it was like to face such a future when you knew-as nobody else did-that you were innocent, not guilty, not the right man; that you were going to spend a third or more of your life rotting in this place or some place like it as a punishment for something you hadn’t done.

Two o’clock came and the other visitors went in. There was a delay, they told me. Naylor hadn’t known I was coming and had to be fetched from the gymnasium. I read the signposted Home Office prohibitions for the nth time, stared out at the blue sky and the traffic moving on the Cowes to Newport road, struggled to remember what Naylor looked like and tried to decide what to say to him. Then, after twenty minutes that had seemed like hours I was called.

A prison officer took me through two time-locked closing doors, up a flight of steps, through a metal detector and into the visiting room. Which, to my surprise, was comfortably furnished and pleasantly decorated, with potted plants and pictures on the walls that somehow made you forget the bars on the windows. Family groups sat at well-spaced tables in peach-upholstered chairs, drinking tea and smoking cigarettes, chatting and smiling. While in the farthest corner from the supervising officers’ desk sat one man without companions. And he was staring straight at me.

A stone heavier perhaps and longer-haired than when I’d studied him in the dock at his trial, Shaun Naylor looked bemusingly fit and well, his eyes clear and intense, his gaze direct and mildly challenging. He was wearing the regulation outfit of blue denim trousers and striped shirt, cuffs rolled high above the elbows to reveal gym-honed biceps and forearms. He finished a cigarette as I approached and stubbed it out in the ashtray without taking his eyes off me. He didn’t smile or get up or even uncross his legs. He just waited, like a man who’d learnt the necessity of patience, like a man with time to spare-even for me.