Vera walked away from the window and knocked on the kitchen door. Not too loud. The state of their nerves, she’d give them all heart attacks. But they’d probably think it was James. She imagined them staring at each other, trying to decide who should answer. Eventually, Emma opened the door. That would be what the parents had wanted, Vera thought. They always knew what was best for her, and they always got their way. The young woman stood in the doorway, still holding the baby, glaring out at them.
“I can’t believe James got you involved with this,” Emma said. “It’s not police business. Nothing to do with you.”
“He was worried,” Vera said mildly. “It’d do no harm to let him know you’re safe. Are you going to let us in?”
“What do you want from us at this time of night?”
A few questions. As you’re all up anyway.”
The fight seemed to leave Emma suddenly and she became passive again, wan, girlish. She stood aside to let them past. Why does she do it? Vera thought. Why does she turn into a child every time there’s trouble? That little-girl look. The big sad eyes. Is it conscious?
Does she think it will keep her out of bother? Make Dan Greenwood love her?
“How did you get here?” Vera asked. Emma, in this mode, made her want to lash out and the question came out brutally.
“I got a lift.”
“Where is he now?”
“Who?” But already Emma was blushing. It started at her neck and ears and moved up her face.
“Dan Greenwood. You went to see him. He gave you a lift here. Don’t mess me about. If I ask you questions, it’s because I need information.”
“I don’t know where he is now.” Emma seemed on the verge of tears. Vera could sense Ashworth behind her, winding himself up to be chivalrous. Any minute now he’d be offering the lass his hankie. He was always taken in by a pretty face and a sob story. She moved through to the kitchen where the Winters were sitting just as they’d been when she’d watched them through the window.
“I hope you’ll forgive the intrusion,” she said.
Nobody spoke. They stared at her.
“I’ve just told Emma, there are a few more questions.” And then, she thought, with a bit of luck she’d be away from this place and these people. They were getting under her skin. She could almost believe that they were the cause of the allergy on her legs, the itching and scratching. It was the people, or the stagnant water in the ditches, or the rotting weeds in the set-aside fields. Then she told herself not to be so daft and get on with the job.
“An investigation like this,” she said, ‘we have to dig deep. People have secrets…”
“Are you talking about James?” Robert interrupted. “Emma has already explained about that. There was no need for you to come all the way out here.”
“No,” Vera said. “Not James.” She stopped, turned to Emma. “But why don’t you phone him? Put the poor man out of his misery.”
“What other secrets can there be?” Emma said.
Vera didn’t answer directly. “Phone James. Listen to what he has to say.”
“Why do you want me out of the way?” Emma said. “I’m not a child. You can talk in front of me.”
Vera looked at her sadly.
“Sergeant Ashworth has been doing most of the leg work. He spent the day in York.” Robert Winter was sitting opposite her. She was watching for a reaction, but none came. Perhaps he’d been expecting this. Perhaps he’d been waiting for it from the time news of Jeanie Long’s innocence was released. Beside her, Mary, who had been restless all evening, was becoming even more agitated.
“We don’t need to discuss this now, do we? It’s late. As you can tell, Inspector, we have our own family problems. Emma’s very upset.”
“Mr. Winter?”
“What do you want to know?” His voice was professionally courteous, with just a hint of a threat. I hope you’re not here with allegations you can’t substantiate. We’re victims. You should treat us with respect and compassion.
“I spoke to your former business partner, Mrs. Sullivan.” Joe Ashworth was still standing by the door. They all looked up at him. At one time it would have made him awkward to be the centre of attention. Vera was proud of his new confidence, liked to think she had something to do with it.
“Maggie and I parted in rather unfriendly circumstances,” Robert said. “She felt she’d lost out financially. I don’t think you should depend on her version of events.”
“She told me you developed an obsession with her teenage daughter.”
“Ridiculous.”
“She said that she was the one to dissolve the partnership. She felt she was forced to break professional links with you, because she was so concerned about your relationship with Zoe.”
“Look,” Robert said. He put a smile into his voice, sounded like a politician at his most sincere. “Maggie Sullivan’s husband left them when Zoe was still a baby. I was a father figure. I admit I took an interest in the girl, but I thought I was helping.”
“I’m sure that was how it started. She was almost a part of the family, wasn’t she? She spent a lot of time in your home and she helped with your children.”
“She was an only child,” Robert said. “She loved them.”
“Then you started phoning her when you knew her mother wasn’t in the house. You took to waiting for her outside school, following her home. You wrote her love letters. Mrs. Sullivan described you as a stalker. She threatened to go to the police, but disliked the idea of heir daughter becoming involved in a court case.”
“You make it sound so squalid,” Robert said. “It wasn’t like that.”
“What was it like?” Vera asked, as if she was just curious, as if it was a bit of gossip over the tea table.
“I suppose I was going through a crisis in my life. Everything seemed pointless. I was very depressed. Helping Zoe gave me some sense of worth. I believed I could make a difference. Bring some love into her life. It’s easy to be cynical about something like that, but it was how I felt. It was at that point that I discovered the importance of faith. It was all meant, you see. The misunderstanding with Zoe and Maggie, the problems at work, they all helped to bring me to Christ.”
His voice was calm and reasonable. He could have been presenting evidence about an offender in the magistrates court. There was a silence. For a moment even Vera could think of nothing to say. She considered laughter to be the only response to such a distortion of the truth, but she’d seen Emma’s face, which was pinched and white, and knew that this was no laughing matter.
Robert stared round at them. “You do understand, don’t you?”
Nobody replied.
Chapter Forty-Four
There was a brief, intense silence and then the phone rang. No one moved, but it continued to ring. Mary got to her feet, walked into the hall and answered it. They could hear her words quite clearly. “She’s here, James. She was just going to ring you. Yes, she’s fine. Perhaps you could collect her. Not immediately. Give her half an hour.”
She came back into the kitchen and took her place without a word. Vera looked at them, waited for someone to speak.
“You lied,” Emma said to her father. She seemed more in control. Her voice was as calm as his had been. “You’re no better than James.”
“You were very young. It was complicated.”
“I remember Zoe. They’re good memories a barbecue in the garden. Her helping me with piano practice. She was musical, wasn’t she? She played the flute. It’s one of my clearest childhood memories, sitting in the1 garden in York, listening to her practise. I wonder what she’s doing now. Do you know?”
She looked around at her parents, but they both ignored her.
“I wondered why she stopped looking after us.
Chris missed her more than I did. She understood his projects. They were very close.”