He was down the hill from her house now and had beensince nine. It was therapy for the way he was feeling. At eleven, when she still hadn't emerged, he gave up for the day, drove himself to Pembridge Road, and in the secondhand bookshop there, found a new book called Crimes of the Forties he'dnever heard of before. He bought it because it had a chapter on Reggie.
Back once more in Campden Hill Square, he opened thebook to find there was even less about the Rillington Placemurders than he had thought at first. A bit of a waste of money. Still, the photographs were the best he had yet seen. The frontispiece, a large picture of Reggie driven to court, was particularlygood. Mix gazed at the rather well-sculpted face, the narrow mouth and large nose, the horn-rimmed glasses. What would you do in my position? he asked it. What would you do?
Nerissa saw him from an upstairs window and thought of some action she might take. Phoning the police, for instance. But he wasn't doing any harm. He would get tired of waiting, he must surely have work to do, and she wasn't going out till midday. She would like to have gone for a run first but that was impossible with him there.
Last evening she'd been sure Darel jones would call her. He could easily get her phone number from his mother, who would get it from Nerissa's mother. She had stayed in all evening, waiting for him to phone. Actually sat by the phone incase it rang and she couldn't get to it in time. Like a teenager. Like she was aged fifteen, with her first boyfriend. When it had gone ten she knew it wasn't going to happen. Plenty of men would phone after ten, after eleven come to that, but no tDarel. Somehow she knew that. Disappointed, she had gone to bed early.
Some women wouldn't wait, they'd phone a man themselves. Why couldn't she? She didn't know, something to do with the way Mum had brought her up, no doubt. Tomorrow they were going to start on the shots for that magazine cover, and feature and soon after that the London Fashion Fair began.S he and Naomi and Christy would be on the catwalk for that. These were her last days of freedom but instead of enjoying herself she was standing here at the window, watching a man watching her. The price of fame, her agent had told her, and then told her to tell the police. She flinched from doingt hat. Maybe she'd pluck up her nerve and get into the car, not looking in his direction, go over to her sister-in-laws, see the baby. Or perhaps she'd wait awhile, give him half an hour. Madam Shoshana first, the stones or the cards and the latest installment of her future foretold. If only that guy would giveup and go.
She had a shower, sprayed herself with Jo Malone's Gardenia,and accidentally dropping the cap of the bottle on the floor, put on combat trousers and a canary yellow sweatshirt. A difficult shade, her mother said, while acknowledging that, with her coloring, she could wear it. Letting fall the tracksuit she'd been wearing, leaving behind her a trail of tissues, cottonwool, and orange sticks, she took another look out of her bedroom window. He was still there. If only this house had another way out, an escape route into a back lane as some Notting Hill houses had. She should have thought of that before she bought it.
If she didn't hurry she'd be late for her appointment. She went downstairs, deciding to risk it, run the gauntlet, whatever that meant, but when she took a final look he was gone. An overwhelming sense of relief flooded her. Perhaps he wouldn'tcome back, perhaps he'd had enough.
All the way to Shoshana's she half expected his car to appear suddenly from a side turning-blue, a small Honda, index number starting LCO something-but he must have gone. Presumably he did work somewhere. She was ten minutes late,t hanks to him. Mounting the stairs, she suddenly remembered once coming down them and meeting a young girl comingup, a dark, sharp-featured girl who reminded her of pictures she had seen of women in that war in Bosnia. Funny I should think of her, she thought. Shoshana had told her (when sheasked) that the girl worked at the spa and her name was-was itDanielle?
The room was dark and incense-smelling as ever but today Shoshana was in black silk with moons and ringed planets embroidered on the bodice. A veil covered her hair, secured inplace by a kind of tiara.
"I'll have the cards, not the stones," Nerissa said firmly.
Shoshana disliked being instructed but she liked the money and Nerissa was a good client. "Very well." Underlying her words was the implication: on your own head be it. "Take a card."
The first one Nerissa took was the queen of hearts, and the second and the third. "You are promised great good luck in love," Shoshana said, wondering how she had managed to allow three queens to appear in sequence. The next one had better be the ace of spades. But it wasn't. Nerissa smiledhappily.
"I have never seen such astonishing good fortune," Shoshana said, hissing and cursing inwardly. She much preferred doom-laden forecasts but she could hardly invent a negative future when Nerissa so obviously knew what the queen of hearts signified. "Take a last card."
It was bound to be the ace this time and it was. Shoshana concealed her pleasure. "A death, of course." She put her hands into the bag of stones, took out the lapis and the rose quartz and rolled them between her palms. "It's not you or anyone close to you. It's happened already."
"Maybe it's my great-aunt Laetitia. She died last week."
Shoshana disliked clients coming up with their own interpretations.
"No. I think not. A young person, this is. A girl. Ic an see no more. The words were written but clouds have obscured them. That is all."
The cards were put away,the stones replaced in their bag.Nerissa hated the way the wizard seemed to move when the candles flickered. The white owl had its amber eyes fixed on her. "Forty-five pounds, please," said Shoshana.
" That girl I met on the stairs once, she looked nice. Danielle, is she called?"
"What about her?"
"I don't know. I just thought of her."
"She's left," Shoshana said, opening the door to speed Nerissa on her way.
Two policemen called on Mr. Reza and then at Shoshana's Spa. When they had been told at both places that Danila Kovic had left her work and her rented room without notice, without a word to employer or landlord, they began to take things seriously.Their press release was too late for the Evening Standard but in time for the BBC Early Evening News and the next day's papers, where it nearly, but not quite, took precedence over the "hottest day since records began" story.
Nerissa heard it while baby-sitting for her brother but, in the absence of a photograph, failed to identify her as the girls he'd seen on the stairs. Mix also saw the news. He thought he'd been quite worried enough, but now he understood he had been living in a fool's paradise, continuing to believe that Danila's disappearance would never be noticed. He had had another bad day, beginning with his failure to see Nerissa, then a terrible row with Colette Gilbert-Bamber, who threatened to report his lapses to the firm if there was ever another. Leaving her house without any lunch or even a glass of wine, he had had to go straight to the doctor.
Ever since he had known the appointment was to be madehe had taken it for granted he was perfectly well, a young, fithealthy man. The doctor disagreed. He insisted on taking ablood sample to be checked for cholesterol. That was on accountof Mix's blood pressure, which ought to have been somethinglike 130 over 40 and instead was an alarming 170 over 60.