He checked his watch. It was a big multi-dial Breitling on a stainless steel strap, a new model that even had a built-in distress beacon. He’d only recently bought it to replace his old Breitling and seeing it made me shiver. I’d once had to identify what I’d believed was his body by his last watch.
“I ought to nip over and say hello to my dear old ma first,” he said. “The bush telegraph will probably have told her I’m in town by now and if I don’t report in within a couple of hours she’ll never let me forget it.”
“You’re brave.” I said, nodding to the shiny new Shogun. Despite his best efforts to relocate her, Sean’s mother still lived on the notorious Copthorne estate on the other side of the river. Strange cars left round there unattended for longer than half an hour tended to come out minus various bits of their anatomy, like wheels and glass and stereo systems. “You sure it will still be there when you come out?”
“Don’t worry about me,” he said with a grim little smile. “Are you going to go back to the house and keep an eye on Jamie?”
“Yeah,” I said. “But first there’s someone I’ve got to see as well.”
***
Sean didn’t ask questions and I didn’t fill him in on what I had planned. Instead I threaded the Suzuki through the traffic and cut through one of the side streets to bring me out close to the main police station. I parked the bike up in an inconspicuous alley nearby and walked in through the front door.
The officer on the desk took one look at my helmet and bike jacket and already had his hand out for my documents when I brought him up short with a demand to see one of his superiors. We had a brief stare-out competition while he decided whether to take me seriously or not. I won.
“Well, Charlie, this is an unexpected surprise,” Superintendent MacMillan said, rising from his chair a few minutes later as I was shown into his office. We were on a high floor with what amounted to a view, further away from the machine-gun chatter of a road drill breaking up part of Great John Street below.
He offered me his hand to shake, something he hadn’t done when he’d come to see me at the cottage. There he’d been on my terms. Here I was most definitely on his.
I hovered for a moment, came within a fraction of turning round and walking out again. Then I remembered Clare’s spiked figure and sat down abruptly. When I looked I found MacMillan watching me with that coolly calculating gaze of his, waiting for me to find my starting point.
That was another thing about MacMillan. Silences didn’t make him uncomfortable, however awkward others might find them. He would have sat there until doomsday and waited for me to speak if he thought it might be to his advantage.
“You remember Clare Elliot?” I asked but it was a rhetorical question.
“Of course.”
How could he not? Clare had been in the wrong place at the wrong time – my time, my place – and had nearly died for it. To my unending surprise both she and Jacob seemed to have forgiven me for that, even though I had yet to forgive myself.
“She was nearly killed yesterday,” I said. “On the back of Slick Grannell’s bike, on the road to Devil’s Bridge.”
“Ah.” MacMillan stood up. “Wait there,” he said and went out, not quite closing the door behind him.
I sat alone in the policeman’s office, staring at the wall behind the desk but not seeing it. I was seeing Clare and Jacob as I’d last seen them, on the terrace at the back of their house after a relaxed supper.
We’d sat and watched the local bat population scything through the midge swarms by the edge of the wood as the sun had gone down. My friends, happy and whole. And I saw how, whatever happened next, nothing was going to be the same again after this.
The door was pushed wider and I heard MacMillan come back in. He walked back round to his side of the desk, reading a typed report and frowning as he regained his seat and put the report down in front of him.
I cleared my throat. “Do you still need someone to infiltrate this road race gang?” I asked. “Because if so, I’m in.”
He leaned forwards and placed his elbows on the desktop, steepling his fingers together very precisely. He regarded me for a few long moments. I stared back at him and tried not to fidget.
“When I asked you to get involved in this, Charlie, it was solely because you were completely uninvolved,” he said. “Now you’re not. Now, I fear, it’s become personal.”
“Dead right it’s personal,” I said evenly. “Why else would I agree to this?”
“You do realise that there can’t be any favouritism here?”
“Favouritism?”
“If this Grannell character was indeed taking part in an illegal road race at the time of his death, then anyone connected to organising or taking part in these races is open to prosecution as an accessory,” he said.
I held his gaze steady and didn’t reply.
“At the moment,” he went on, tapping the report, “we can’t be certain exactly what happened. There was too much contamination of the scene by the other motorcyclists who arrived there before we did. Grannell and Miss Elliot were certainly hit by another vehicle, but as yet we don’t know if that actually caused the accident. We were hoping,” he added mildly, “that Miss Elliot herself might be able to help us.”
I thought of Clare’s confusion of this morning, compared to her apparent clarity of last night, and shook my head. “I doubt you’ll get much out of her,” I said carefully.
MacMillan was too self-contained to snort, but he let his breath out faster than normal through his nose. “Now there’s a surprise,” he murmured, “considering that, if she was a willing participant, she might also be liable.”
I felt my body stiffen, however much I tried to control it, and knew that MacMillan had seen it too.
“Whatever other game Slick was playing, he was just giving Clare a lift to Devil’s Bridge,” I bit out, ignoring the clamour of doubt at the back of my mind. “Nothing more than that.”
The policeman regarded me with a fraction of a smile. “You see?” he said gently, shaking his head. “You’re much too close to this to be objective, Charlie. I can’t use you.”
I stuck my open hands up in front of me to indicate surrender, stood abruptly and turned on my heel. I was halfway through the doorway when MacMillan’s voice halted me.
“We haven’t always seen eye-to-eye in the past, Charlie, but I hope you have enough respect for me to listen to some advice,” he said quietly. “Stay out of this.”
There was finality in his tone. No second chances. I ducked my head back round the door and gave him a tight little smile.
“That’s always been my trouble, Superintendent,” I said. “I’m really bad at taking advice.”
Five
I rode straight from my abortive interview with MacMillan back to Jacob and Clare’s. All the way I ran my conversation with the policeman over in my head. I didn’t like it any better the fourth or fifth time than I had the first.