‘And?’
‘No details,’ Holly said. ‘Nothing useful, like a name. Not even proof that she was having an affair with him. They think she must have suspected they were listening because she ended the call very quickly.’
‘What did they get?’
‘An older man. Educated, well spoken. An arrangement to meet for dinner.’
‘That could have been anything. A relative. Colleague. Boss from the shop.’
‘It doesn’t sound like a relative,’ Joe said. ‘If there’d been anyone like that in the family you’d have thought Phyllis would have mentioned him. Bragged, like.’
‘I don’t suppose they did anything useful,’ Vera said. ‘Like follow her and see what he looked like.’
Holly grinned. ‘Nah. They were tempted to book a table in the same restaurant, but they’re well-brought-up lasses. Thought it wouldn’t be right to spy on her.’
‘I hate well-brought-up lasses,’ Vera said.
‘Luckily the women she worked with in the dress shop weren’t so picky.’
Vera smiled slowly. She thought perhaps she could take to Holly after all. ‘What did you get from them?’
‘Nothing exciting,’ Holly admitted. ‘I mean, nothing really useful. But confirmation that the meetings with the older man weren’t about a family connection or to do with work. She did talk a bit more freely with the girls in the shop. I think she felt more easy with them. She liked the idea of sharing the posh Jesmond flat with the classy southerners, but they didn’t have much in common.’
‘Tell me.’
Holly pulled out a small notebook, covered with her open schoolgirl writing. A swat wanting to impress.
‘About six months ago she came into work wearing a new ring. Opal and silver. Antique. She said it was a present. He’d bought it when they were out for the day in York. It was the first time they’d spent the night together—’
Vera interrupted. ‘Did they get the name of the hotel?’
‘No. But one of them could remember what Lily had said about it. “That’s the great thing about going out with someone a bit older. They know how to do things properly.” They asked her how old he was, but she wouldn’t say. “You wouldn’t understand.” One of them asked if he was old enough to be her father. She hadn’t answered but she’d laughed so they guessed he probably was.’
‘They never saw him?’
‘No. Like I said, nothing really useful.’
‘Oh believe me, pet. There’s plenty useful here. Dig out the ring. Charlie, is it in the stuff the search team brought in?’
‘I don’t think so.’
‘Check again. I don’t remember seeing anything like that in the flat, but it must have been there. Then someone can have a fun day out in York, visiting the antique shops and the jewellers. Unless her mysterious lover paid for it by cash, we’ve a reasonable chance of tracking him down. And let’s have someone on the phone to all the decent hotels.’
‘Isn’t it obvious?’ Joe said.
‘What do you mean?’ Vera turned on him.
‘We heard from Peter Calvert’s students that he was having it off with a younger woman.’
‘We heard there was a rumour going round,’ she said. ‘Nothing definite and no proof. And even if the rumour was true there are a fair few bonny young students in Newcastle for him to choose from. Doesn’t mean it was Lily Marsh.’
Besides, she thought, Peter Calvert isn’t the only older man floating around the edge of this case. There’s Samuel Parr. Lily had a Northumberland Libraries ticket, could have bumped into him too. And if I had to choose between Peter Calvert and Samuel Parr, I know which one I’d go for every time. And the elaborate crime scenes were much more Parr’s style. But she didn’t say anything to the team. She kept her suspicion to herself. A private pleasure. A possibility to surprise them at the end of the case. If she turned out to be right.
She realized they were looking at her, waiting for her to continue. ‘Well?’ she demanded. ‘Anything else?’
Joe leaned across the table towards her. ‘I’ve tracked down Ben Craven.’
She knew the name should mean something to her, but it didn’t. He watched her. She could tell he was pleased with himself. You’re getting a bit smug for my liking.
‘The lad she was passionately in love with when she was in the sixth form. The one she got so obsessed about she messed up her A levels.’
‘Of course,’ she said as if she’d known all along. Fooling no one. ‘What’s he up to now?’
‘He went away to university. Liverpool. Did a social work course. Moved back to the north east last summer. Guess what he’s doing now?’ He looked at them, savouring the moment, before answering his own question. ‘He’s a psychiatric social worker at St George’s. The hospital where Luke Armstrong was treated.’
‘Did he work with Luke?’ Vera wasn’t in the mood for games.
‘I don’t know. I haven’t had a chance to talk to him.’
‘Don’t. Not until I’ve had a chat to Julie. We don’t want to frighten him away.’
Why hadn’t Joe told her this as soon as he’d found out? She felt like demanding an explanation. But this wasn’t the place. Not in front of the others. He’s getting complacent, she thought. Cocky. He thinks he can take me for granted.
Perhaps he sensed her anger, because he became apologetic. ‘I spoke to his mum only just now. Just before the meeting.’
I take him for granted too, she thought. Think of him as family, expect more of him than I should.
‘Samuel Parr’s wife committed suicide,’ she said. ‘I want the background, how she died. Charlie, can you look into that?’
He nodded and scribbled a note on a scrap of paper.
‘Anything from the lighthouse? Anyone remember seeing a murderer with the body of a young woman under their arm?’ She knew it wasn’t funny, but it was getting to her. The nerve of the killer. The cheek of him.
‘Nothing useful yet. Someone said Northumbria Water were working there for an hour. I’ll check if their guys saw anything.’
‘Well,’ she said brightly. ‘We’ve all got a lot to get on with . . .’
Charlie cleared his throat again. The ball of phlegm seemed constantly stuck in his gullet. ‘There is something else. Probably nothing.’
‘Spit it out, Charlie!’ Thinking, as soon as the words came out: But not literally, pet. No, not that.
‘I found this in the middle of all the papers we got from the search team,’ he said. ‘And I thought, with the flowers, like, it might be important.’
He held it in a clear plastic bag. A piece of cream card, A6 size, and, stuck to it, a pressed flower. Yellow, delicate. Some sort of vetch? Vera thought. There’d been a craze for pressing flowers when she was a kid. One of the teachers had started them off. You stuck the flower between blotting paper and weighed it down with heavy books – there’d been plenty of those in Vera’s house – but she’d never much seen the point. Clearing out the house after Hector had died she’d come across one of her attempts among the pages of one of his field guides. A primrose, picked, pressed, then forgotten for more than thirty years. It had gone onto the bonfire with the rest of the crap.
‘Anything written on the back?’
Charlie turned over the plastic bag. XXX in black ink. A row of kisses. It could have been a card made by a child for a mother. But this was something different, Vera thought. A love token?
‘Was it in an envelope?’
‘No, just like this.’
‘No chance of DNA, then.’
‘It suggests Peter Calvert, doesn’t it?’ Joe Ash-worth said tentatively.
‘Maybe.’ She found it hard to imagine the arrogant lecturer taking the time and effort to make the card. Wouldn’t it be just the sort of thing he’d sneer at? ‘Perhaps Lily did it herself, but never got the time to send it. Or it could have been preparation for something she was planning to do with the kids in her class. Get it to forensics. They might give us something on the glue.’