‘And Walter?’
‘The only child I’ve been able to contact is his son, Rufus. He works for the Institute of Civil Engineers. The moment I mentioned Walter, he hung up.’
‘Maybe he’s been getting the same “sell everything, I want to give it to the church” letters as Marion’s daughter?’
‘Maybe.’
‘Well, I found something last night, too, after Hampstead Heath went home.’
Strike pulled out his phone, typed in a couple of words, then handed it to Robin, who found herself looking at a picture of a tall man with a long jaw and steel-grey hair, who was pictured mid-speech on stage, his arms stretched wide. Robin didn’t immediately understand why she was being shown the picture until she saw the caption: Joe Jackson of the UHC, speaking at the Climate Change Conference, 2015.
‘Oh,’ she said. ‘Joe, from the Polaroids?’
‘Could well be. He’s based at the San Francisco centre these days. He’s the right kind of age. He might not look much like the type to have a skull tattoo now, but there are plenty of people wandering around with tattoos they wish they hadn’t got when they were younger. Schoolmate of mine in Cornwall got his first girlfriend’s name tattooed on his neck. She dumped him as soon as she saw it.’
Robin didn’t smile. Instead she said quietly, her eyes on Ronnie Scott’s,
‘I feel as though we’re up against something we can’t fight. They’ve got it stitched up, and it’s genius, really. No wonder people either self-destruct or never talk once they get out. They’ve either had sex with underage teens, or participated in abuse, or watched people die in agony. People who stay are either too frightened or ground down to think of escaping, or they’re like Becca and him –’ she gestured towards Strike’s phone, ‘– true believers. They rationalise the abuse, even if they’ve suffered from it. I’ll bet you anything, if we went to Joe Jackson and asked him whether he’d ever been made to put on a pig mask and sodomise a man with a low IQ, he’d deny it, and not even because he’s frightened. He must have got quite high up in the hierarchy, if he’s giving speeches like that. He’ll have shut down part of his brain. Watching Becca on that tape… she knew she was lying and she didn’t flinch. It was all justified, all necessary. In her mind, she’s a heroine, helping the whole world towards the Lotus Way.’
‘So we give up, do we?’ said Strike. ‘We let Will Edensor rot in there?’
‘I’m not saying that, but—’
Strike’s mobile rang.
‘Hi Pat, what’s up?’
Robin could hear Pat’s gravelly voice, though she couldn’t make out the words.
‘Righto, we’re coming straight back. Five minutes.’
Strike hung up with an odd expression on his face.
‘Well, I’m glad you don’t think we should let Will Edensor rot,’ he told Robin.
‘Why?’
‘Because,’ said Strike, ‘he’s just turned up at the office.’
103
In this hexagram we are reminded of youth and folly… When the spring gushes forth, it does not know at first where it will go. But its steady flow fills up the deep place blocking its progress…
The I Ching or Book of Changes
Robin entered the office first, with Strike just behind her. Will Edensor was sitting on the sofa by Pat’s desk, wearing his blue tracksuit, which was not only filthy, but torn at the knees. He looked even thinner than when Robin had last seen him, although perhaps she’d simply become re-habituated to people who looked decently fed. At Will’s feet sat an old plastic bag that appeared to contain some large, solid object, and on his lap sat little Qing, who was also wearing a blue tracksuit, and eating a chocolate biscuit with an expression of ecstasy on her face.
Will turned scarlet when he saw Robin.
‘Hi Will,’ she said.
Will looked down at the floor. Even his ears were red.
‘That child needs some proper food,’ said Pat, sounding as though this was Strike and Robin’s fault. ‘We’ve only got biscuits.’
‘Good thinking,’ said Strike, pulling out his wallet, ‘could you get us all some pizza, Pat?’
Pat took the notes Strike had handed her, pulled on her coat and left the office. Robin wheeled Pat’s computer chair out from behind the desk to sit down at a short distance from Will and Qing. Strike, conscious of looming over everyone, went to the cupboard to take out one of the folding plastic chairs. Will sat hunchbacked, holding his daughter, blushing furiously, staring at the carpet. Qing, who was munching her biscuit, was easily the most at ease person in the room.
‘It’s great to see you, Will,’ said Robin. ‘Hello, Qing,’ she added, smiling.
‘More!’ said the toddler, stretching out her hands towards the biscuit tin on Pat’s desk.
Robin took out two chocolate fingers and gave them to her. Will remained hunched over, as though in pain, holding Qing around her middle. Strike, who had no idea that the last time Will had seen Robin he’d been naked and masturbating – Robin’s account had left her partner assuming both had been fully clothed when Will had thrown his punch – assumed his embarrassment stemmed from having hit her.
‘How did you get out?’ Robin asked Will, while Qing munched joyfully.
She hadn’t forgotten what Will had done to her in the Retreat Room, but at the moment that was of far less importance to her than the extraordinary fact that he’d left Chapman Farm.
‘Climbed over the wall at the blind spot,’ he muttered. ‘Same as you.’
‘By night?’
‘No, because I had to bring Qing.’
He forced himself to look up at Robin, but was unable to hold her gaze long, and instead addressed the leg of Pat’s desk.
‘I’ve got to find out where Lin is,’ he said, a little desperately.
‘We’re looking for her,’ Robin assured him.
‘Why?’
‘Because,’ said Robin, before Strike could say anything tactless about Lin’s potential usefulness in discrediting the church, ‘we care about her. I was there, remember, when she was miscarrying?’
‘Oh, yeah,’ said Will. ‘I forgot… they’ve got centres in Birmingham and Glasgow, you know,’ he added.
‘Yes, we know,’ said Robin. ‘But we think she might be in Dr Zhou’s clinic, just outside London.’
‘Has he got a clinic?’ said Will naively. ‘I thought he was just the church’s doctor?’
‘No, he’s a doctor on the outside, too,’ said Robin.
‘Lin doesn’t like him. She won’t like being in his clinic,’ muttered Will.
He glanced up at Robin and back at his own feet.
‘My father hired you, didn’t he?’
Strike and Robin looked at each other. The former, happy for Robin to take the lead, gave a slight shrug.
‘Yes,’ said Robin.
‘You can’t tell him I’m out,’ said Will, with a mixture of desperation and ferocity, looking up at Robin from beneath his eyebrows. ‘All right? If you’re going to tell my father, I’ll leave now. I only came here because I’ve got to find Lin, before I go to jail.’
‘Why d’you say you’re going to jail?’ asked Robin.
‘Because of all the things I’ve done. I don’t want to talk about it. As long as Lin and Qing are OK, I don’t mind, I deserve it. But you can’t tell my father. He’ll have to know once I’ve been arrested, but I won’t have to talk to him then, because I’ll be in custody. Anyway, once I start talking, the Drowned Prophet will probably come for me, so it won’t matter. But Lin’ll be able to get a council flat or something, won’t she? If she’s got a kid? Because I haven’t got any money,’ he added pathetically.