He shoved his cold hands a little farther into his jacket pockets.
“No one’s life is perfect.”
Lally turned on him with sudden, blazing fury. “Well, mine sucks. How could my parents be so stupid? And my dad—you don’t know what he’s like. He’ll—”
“Sneaking away to bare your soul, Lal?” The voice was smooth and mocking, and Kit recognized it even as his body jerked from the surprise.
“Leo! You bastard!” Lally whirled round, striking at the boy’s chest with her fists, but Leo caught both her wrists in one hand and spun her back like a marionette.
“Shhh,” he said. “You don’t want to call attention to yourself. I should think there’s been quite enough of that in your family for one day.” That made Lally struggle harder, but when she saw Kit step forward to intervene, she went limp and Leo let her go.
“Where are you going?” Leo asked, as casually as if he’d run across them in the street rather than creeping up behind them and trying to frighten them half to death.
“For a walk. To see the boats,” Kit answered, trying to make it clear they didn’t need company. He started down the far side of the bridge, and Lally followed.
“I’ll come with you, then.” Leo fell in beside Lally. “My dad’s taken Lally’s dad to get royally pissed at a more ‘accommodating’
pub, so I’m all yours for the duration.”
“Your dad just left you?” Kit asked, curiosity overcoming his dislike.
“I’m not a baby, like some,” Leo snapped, then smiled. “I said I’d walk home. It’s not far. You can come with me, and we’ll have a look at where Juliet found this famous mummy.” He took a packet of cigarettes from the pocket of his peacoat and tapped out two, handing one to Lally without asking if she wanted it. She stopped, touching his hand as she held the end of the fag to the flame, and the casual intimacy of the gesture made Kit feel suddenly queasy.
“You can’t go in a crime scene,” he said as they merged into single file, now following Leo down the towpath. “Everyone knows that.”
“And who’s going to see?” Leo shot back. “The police have finished picking up things, and there’s only a stupid tape. How is a tape supposed to keep anyone out?”
“You could destroy evidence.”
“Ooh, listen to you, Mister Policeman. Taking after your daddy,
are you? Anyway, what difference does it make? The thing’s probably been there for ages. Just think, Lally—”
“Shut up, Leo.” Lally stopped so suddenly that Kit bumped into her. “That’s horrid. I’m not going any farther if you don’t shut up.”
The mist had beaded on her dark hair, and now a drop formed on the end of her nose. She wiped her face with the back of her sleeve without taking her eyes off Leo.
“Okay, okay.” Leo held up his hands, then took a drag off the cigarette. “Forget it. I’ve found a new place, anyway.”
He and Lally looked at each other for a moment in silent communication, then Lally pushed past Leo and trudged on, her head ducked in misery. Kit was about to reach for her, to insist that they go back, when a boat materialized out of the fog a few yards down the path.
He knew it instantly.
Even with her sapphire paintwork dulled by moisture, the sleek lines of the Lost Horizon were unmistakable. Light glowed from within, and smoke hung heavily above the chimney, barely distinguishable from the surrounding fog. Annie Lebow was at home.
Kit’s first instinct was to call out. He could show Lally the boat; they could get warm; maybe Annie would even offer them something hot to drink. Then he realized two things simultaneously.
The first was that he didn’t want to share anything that was special to him with Leo, and he didn’t see how he could make Leo leave them alone. The second was that he’d expected to find the Horizon above Barbridge, on the Middlewich Branch, where he had seen her yesterday. Had Annie changed her mind about her invitation? Or perhaps she had never meant it at all.
So humiliated was he by the idea that she hadn’t intended to keep their appointment that he stopped dead, wishing himself a planet away. The others halted as well, turning startled faces towards him.
Perhaps if no one spoke—if they turned back now—
It was too late. The boat’s stern door swung open and Annie
Lebow stepped out, a cloth firewood carrier in her hand, and reached for the firewood stacked neatly on the roof of the boat. She paused when she saw the three of them just standing there on the path, then smiled a little hesitantly. Her eyes were a clear green against the gray sky and the gray fleece she wore, and her short blond hair stood on end, as if she’d absently run her fingers through it. “Hullo,” she said. “It’s Kit, isn’t it?” she added as she transferred a few pieces of wood into the carrier.
“You’ve moved your boat,” Kit blurted out, then inwardly cursed himself for a complete idiot. Now she’d think he’d been searching for her, like some kind of stalker.
“Oh . . . yes.” She sounded bemused, as if it hadn’t occurred to her. “It was a twenty- four- hour mooring, and all the spots at Barbridge were taken. I should have thought to say so yesterday. I’m sorry if you looked and couldn’t find me.”
“No.” Kit saw the possibility of redemption. “No, we had . . . family things.” Belatedly, he added, “This is my cousin Lally. And Leo.
We were just walking, and saw the boat.”
Annie studied them. “You’re wet. And it’s freezing. Do you want to come inside?” she added, but Kit could hear the reluctance in her voice.
He imagined the three of them in their sodden, steaming clothes, crammed awkwardly into the Horizon’ s cabin as he tried to make conversation, and shook his head. “No, thanks. We have to get back.
But—”
“You could come tomorrow. The weather is supposed to clear.
I’ll be here, or up at Barbridge. I’ve some things to . . . to take care of.” She sounded as if that surprised her.
“Okay, right.” Kit raised his hand in an awkward wave. “See you then.” Grabbing Lally’s sleeve, he pulled her hurriedly back down the path the way they had come, figuring that Leo could bloody well take care of himself.
But after a moment, he heard the unmistakable rustle of movement behind them, and felt an arm draped across his shoulder.
“Did you have a date, then?” Leo whispered, his breath warm in Kit’s ear. “A little old for you, isn’t she? Or does that make it more fun?” When Kit tried to shrug loose, he gripped harder. “I think you’d better tell us all about it.”
The phone rang, sounding tinny and distant in the mobile held to Annie’s ear. She imagined the house at the other end of the electronic connection, pictured Roger swearing as he got up from his laptop and searched for the handset he’d misplaced. But perhaps he’d changed, become more organized, less obsessed with his work, without her there as a foil.
After a moment, however, the answering machine kicked in and she hung up. She didn’t want to leave a message—Roger would see her number on the caller ID, and saying “Call me” seemed stupidly redundant. He would ring her back, he always did, although she was no longer quite sure why.
The dark day had faded imperceptibly to night, and Annie had found herself unable to settle to anything constructive. She’d had an unexpected urge to talk to her husband, as if that might help her sort through her jumbled emotions, but now she realized she hadn’t any idea what she’d meant to say. She’d never been very good at sharing—that was one of the reasons they’d separated. Why did she think this would be any different?
Wandering from the salon into the galley, she pulled an open bottle of Aussie Chardonnay from the fridge. But as she reached for a glass, she felt the slightest movement of the boat and stopped, puzzled. She knew every creak and quirk of the boat, as if it were an extension of her body, and only registered movement when it was something out of the ordinary. This hadn’t been backwash—she’d