‘She wanted to leave!’ de Haan hissed, and winced ‘We couldn’t hold her — why should we? She was no good to us!’
‘So why did you take her in? Was she one of your unwitting Sirens — a lure for Nicholas Friedman?’
De Haan looked stunned at the extent of Palmer’s knowledge. He shook his head. ‘I don’t know what you… It wasn’t like that. They were friends. He needed guidance and she… she agreed to help us.’
‘By pulling him in for you?’
‘Call it what you like. They both did what they wanted to… nobody forced them.’
‘And afterwards? Why did she leave?’
‘She wanted to. She said there was no going back, and agreed to keep quiet about… Friedman and to start a new life.’ He stared at Palmer. ‘She knew what she wanted, unlike some of them.’
To Palmer his words had the hollow ring of self-delusion. If he could convince himself others were to blame, de Haan could do almost anything. ‘So why kill her after all this time?’
But de Haan had run out of words.
Palmer continued relentlessly, knowing he had little time. ‘Had Henry threatened to talk? To expose your scummy operations and get Katie to back him up? Is that why your men went to her mother’s house — to find out where she was?’ When de Haan remained silent, Palmer knew he had touched on the truth. ‘What about the other kids who died? Like Nicholas Friedman. Were they a threat, too?’
De Haan rocked in his seat, obviously in pain, his jowls wobbling as he struggled with the seat belt. ‘They were weak, that’s why!’ he spat, eyes wild with fury. ‘They’d outlived their usefulness — is that clear enough for you? They would have died sooner or later, anyway, from drugs and… their filthy lifestyles!’ He jerked his head sideways at the man in the seat beside him. ‘It was Quine who did it. Blame him! He finally managed to get into Pearcy’s database and discover Katie’s new name and address. He killed her, like he killed the others. He enjoyed it — always had done. I couldn’t control him.’ He gave a sob and a trickle of blood oozed from his mouth. ‘Quine insisted that when the parents wouldn’t pay up or the kids made threats against us, the only thing to do was silence them.’
Palmer nodded. ‘And you went along with it.’
‘Yes, all right — I did!’ De Haan’s voice rose to a scream and his eyes took on a demented look that made the hairs on Palmer’s neck bristle. ‘But so what? She was only a stupid little tart.’
Palmer stepped back from the van, his eyes stone cold. He could smell something burning, and a plume of oily smoke trickled past him into the air. He thought of the steady drip of fuel beneath the van and wondered if the truck driver had bothered to call for help yet. He hoped not.
‘Wait!’ De Haan’s face wore his terror like a mask, and he began to struggle furiously when he saw the absence of emotion on Palmer’s face. ‘You said you’d get me out of here! You said you’d help me!’ De Haan’s voice was hoarse with desperation. ‘I’ll give you money — anything!’
It was the last ounce of weight needed to tip the balance. When he’d considered the idea moments earlier, in a part of his mind capable of dealing objectively with such concepts, Palmer had decided he could never do it. But now it came down to it, it was remarkably easy.
Maybe later he’d have to deal with what followed.
‘I lied,’ he said simply. He put the baton away, then turned and walked away through the trees.
‘What’s happening? Are they alive?’ The truck driver’s voice was tight and edgy. He was standing at the edge of the ditch, clutching the phone like a talisman, as if it might hold the power to reverse the damage that had been done. He stared in the direction of the van, then at Palmer, his eyes imploring him to say that everything was all right. ‘I tried to stop, honest… but they just came out of the gate. It was so sudden… I had a big load on and my brakes couldn’t cope… ’ He dropped his hand to his side with a look of despair. ‘I don’t believe this.’
Palmer felt sorry for him. He would have to live with this forever, even though it hadn’t been his fault. ‘Don’t worry,’ he said softly. ‘I saw it happen. There was nothing you could have done.’
‘What?’ The driver’s look was of dawning comprehension, but still ready to clutch at any lifeline and avoid the unthinkable. He turned and stared towards the van. ‘Shouldn’t we do something? There might still be a chance-’
Before Palmer could answer, there was a soft, muffled whump from among the trees, followed by a roar as the petrol-soaked ground around the van ignited. Vivid flames crackled among the lower branches and climbed around the smashed bodywork, and there was a loud crack as a surviving pane of glass broke in the heat. A lick of fire ate its way greedily up the length of a pine tree, and a dark column of smoke curled snake-like among the treetops and blossomed out into the air. Palmer thought he heard a shrill, intense cry of someone in agony.
But it might have been his imagination.
‘There’s no point,’ he said, pulling the driver away towards the road and breathing in a lungful of fresh country air. ‘They’re beyond help.’
Chapter 43
Riley watched the ambulance carrying Henry Pearcy move slowly down the drive away from Broadcote Hall, and hoped her former colleague would make it through the next few hours. The paramedics had remained neutral when she’d asked about his chances, but their manner had seemed quietly optimistic. It depended, one had said reservedly, on Henry’s levels of mental determination as much as his physical strength. He had been badly beaten and was seriously dehydrated; he had plainly not been fed much more than was necessary to keep him alive, and there could be underlying complications which only a full examination would reveal. Time alone would tell.
As the vehicle curved round a bend and out of sight, it passed a figure striding towards the house. She recognised Palmer’s lean frame and felt a weight lift from her shoulders. Behind him and some distance beyond the trees bordering the road, a thick column of smoke pulsed into the sky, dragging with it a scattering of black debris like circling birds of prey. But there was no sound to indicate the extent of the fire, no hint at what might lie at its core. Further off, a siren whooped, heralding the approach of another emergency vehicle.
Palmer’s face was grim and covered in dark smears. His jacket was torn and one shoe glistened with what looked like oil. In spite of that, he walked with his hands thrust in his pockets and a cigarette drooping from the corner of his mouth as if he was out for an afternoon stroll. Some stroll. Some afternoon.
He looked up and saw her, and gave a tired but meaningful shake of his head. It told her all she needed to know. She also knew instinctively that if Palmer wanted to tell her any more — any more than he would tell the police, at least — about what had happened, he would do so in his own good time. Or maybe not.
In the meantime, she would go to where Henry had directed her while they’d been waiting for the ambulance to arrive. His voice barely audible, he’d told her of the place in the house where he’d hidden information about the Church of Flowing Light. There, he’d said, was more evidence about the extent of their operations and the people they had used and ruined. Information he had only realised the significance — and deadly use of — far too late. His feelings of guilt had been all too obvious. It was their need to guard that information which had made them so intent on finding him and Katie Pyle, and why, in the end, they had been prepared to kill them both.
All the missing details of the story Riley could now write.
After that, she decided, she would go away for a few days. Somewhere warm. Somewhere safe. Somewhere she could file away the tragic stories she had learned over the last few days into a deep and forgettable place, hopefully never to take them out again. By the time she came back, her flat would be ready and she might be able to coax the cat back from Mr Grobowski’s cooking. And give it a decent name.