‘Provided Naomi didn’t give him any more brandy. By the time we left he was calming down somewhat. I imagine Alec and Naomi will have got his story from him anyway.’
Derek Reid was lost. His one thought had been to get away from the scene. His neck hurt and his head throbbed where he’d cracked it on the steering wheel. The seat belt had dug deep into his ribs when he had been thrown forward and he’d managed to crack his head a second time on something when the car rolled. He’d hit the back end of Marcus’s car at an angle, his speed and the angle causing the passenger side to lift and he had flipped, then rolled, ended up on his side confused and shaken and hurting like hell.
He did not recall getting out of the car but did know that he had not had the strength to climb over the gate. Unable to open it, he had slithered beneath on his belly and then stumbled across the cow churned field as fast as his shaking legs could take him, his one thought that he should get away.
Now, two fields or three fields over and disorientated, he wondered what to do. The day was warm and there were no cows here to snuffle in that curious way they had. Instead he lay at the edge of a field of wheat or barley, he didn’t know which but had the vague memory that he had once known the difference. He lay down on the swathe of uncut grass at the field edge and listened to his body complain.
‘God, Derek, your dad was right,’ he told himself. ‘Can’t get a bloody thing right. Not ever.’
Except Sharon, he thought. Sharon was right. He’d known that from the start.
Thinking about her gave him the strength to get up and he felt in his trouser pockets for his phone only to realize that it was in his jacket and his jacket was still in the car.
Groaning in despair and disbelief he remembered that it had been cool first thing and he’d slipped his jacket on when he’d gone shopping for Kinnear. A further search of his trouser pockets informed him that all he had in the world was a handful of change and a crumpled five-pound note.
His dad had been right, he thought again. Never could do a damn thing right. It did not seem in the least bit strange that here he was, a man in his early thirties still stung by the words of someone who had disappeared from his life when Derek had still been in his teens.
‘Can’t do a bloody thing right. Bloody waste of skin.’
Derek sighed and considered the irony that he was in this situation precisely because for once in his life he had tried to do the right thing. Driving away from Kinnear that morning, Sam’s words still burning in his ears, he’d finally realized that he was in a no win situation. Kinnear would use him and then scrape him off like shit on the bottom of his shoe. Kinnear had no intention of giving Derek a share of what he saw as his. Sam Kinnear had waited too long and fomented so much greed in that waiting time that he wasn’t about to share any of his spoils now.
He remembered Kinnear talking to him in prison. One long night when Sam had been in a conversational mood and when Sam wanted to talk you had no choice but to listen. He had talked about this man, this driver, this Sam Spade, and how he knew he had the proceeds from those first two jobs. Derek had laughed. Laughed at Kinnear.
Spitting blood through the split lip Kinnear had awarded him as prize for his humour, Derek had explained that Sam Spade was a fiction. A made-up name. No one would call their kid Sam Spade.
So Derek had decided when he had left Kinnear that morning that he would, for once, try to do the sensible thing. He would talk to Marcus and together they could concoct some story. Blackmail would probably fit the bill, he thought. Go to the police and tell them Kinnear was blackmailing them. It was close enough to the truth to be almost real and if forced Derek was now even willing to come clean. Tell the whole truth and nothing but. Do time if he had to. He’d managed before and though his heart sank at the thought of it, he could hack it again if he was forced.
But it seemed that his father’s damnation of him had to thwart even his best intentions. Marcus had seen him and taken off like a scared rabbit and Derek knew that his chance was gone.
He wasn’t sure why he’d tried to run Marcus off the road but he’d sort of figured it might be the only way to get to talk to him, convince him to go along with his scheme. Failing that he would have dragged Marcus’s sorry ass back to Kinnear and looked for another way out, but it was all too late for that now.
Five pounds and a handful of change. Derek started to laugh it was all so bloody stupid. He choked the laughter back; it hurt too much. Would Sharon want him now? Now he wasn’t about to inherit part of Rupert Friedman’s illicit wealth.
Well, he figured, if he could ever find his way out of this damned field and back to the hotel where she was staying he might ask her. But not just now.
Derek shifted position finding the deepest grass and closed his eyes. He had not felt so bone weary in the longest time. Too bone weary even to despair.
With the sun on his face, Derek Reid slept while just two fields away they searched for signs of where he might have gone.
Back at the crash site, the crime scene officer had managed to open the door. The contents of the glove compartment, Reid’s jacket and the assorted debris from the door pockets and floor had settled on the roof.
Pictures had been taken and now he was bagging and tagging everything. No telling what might later be of use. The phone rang and he paused in his methodical search to retrieve it. He straightened up, phone in his gloved hand and waved it at the officer in charge. ‘Should I answer it?’
‘Is there a name?’
‘It says Kinnear.’
‘It what? Bloody hell. Yes.’
The SOCO pressed the key to accept the call and listened.
‘Where the hell are you? I told you to get back here. You listening to me?’
The SOCO covered the mouthpiece. ‘What the hell do I say?’ he whispered.
‘You listening to me?’ Kinnear’s voice again. ‘Who’s there?’ Silence.
‘He’s rung off.’
‘Never mind. Bag it and give it here.’
He took the wrapped phone from the SOCO and shook his head in disbelief. ‘He put Kinnear’s name in his directory,’ he said. ‘What a wally.’
The SOCO shrugged. ‘Lucky break,’ he said.
Sam Kinnear stared at his mobile phone and then dropped it on the bed in disgust. He did not know who had answered the phone but it had not been Derek Reid, that was for sure. He was surprised that no one had spoken. Had it been the police, would they not have announced themselves? Whatever, it seemed to Kinnear that this was not good, that it was a warning, that he should clear out while he still could.
A warning too that Derek was out of the reckoning.
Kinnear always travelled light and it took only minutes to shove his clothes back into his pack and select what food did not need cooking. Bread and beans and cheese and ham went into his bag. He had no objection to cold baked beans. Water. Derek had been bringing the bottled stuff.
Finally he reached beneath the bed and took out a fabric bundle. The gun was cleaned and oiled and he had two full clips to go with it. That, he figured, should be enough. He wasn’t aiming to have to shoot his way out of anywhere but always best to be prepared.
A last look around to check for anything he’d missed and then Kinnear was gone. Retrieving his car from below in the rundown barn. He knew where he would go. He figured he had one last chance to get what he was owed and, risky as that might be, he had come too far and wasn’t about to walk away.
Thirty-One
Elaine Ritchie held the door open halfway and leaned against the frame. She examined Billy Pierce carefully, methodically.
He stood still and waited for her to finish.
She had changed, of course. It had been twenty-five years or more since he had last seen her, sitting in the public gallery as Sam Kinnear was sentenced.
There had been no jubilation that day and that was one of the things he had always remembered about her. Usually the victim’s relatives who came to see the sentencing reacted in some way: relief, joy, tears; but with her there had been nothing like that. Elaine Ritchie had listened as the court sentenced her husband’s killer and then she had got up and quietly left the gallery. No fuss, no sound, not even a change of expression, and it was that same expression he remembered now. That quiet examination, but beyond that there was nothing he could read.