âI thought, if he wants to go, why stop him?' she said bitterly. âSo I said it was my husband. I said I knew his wrist watch and his ring â though Graham would never have worn a ring. He hated jewellery on men.'
It was what Slider had picked up on in the records office. âAnd they were satisfied with your identification.'
âAlong with everything else â why not? And once I'd said it, I couldn't go back on it.'
âDid you want to?'
âOften and often. I still loved him. And whatever you think, when you're married, about being rid of him, it's different when you're all alone and you've got to face up to looking after yourself and your child with no help. But you see â' she met his eyes now with misery and a plea for forgiveness â âthere was a life insurance, and for a miracle he'd kept up the payments. It wasn't much but we desperately needed it, Melanie and me. And once I'd taken the insurance money, I could never tell. And so I never did.'
âYou never told Melanie?'
Shake of head.
âDo you think she guessed?'
Another definite shake. âNot then. She believed her daddy was dead. I can't tell you what that was like. I told myself she was better off without him, but to hear her crying, night after night . . .'
âAnd then you got married again.'
âDon't look at me like that!' she cried, though Slider was sure his expression hadn't changed. The blame was in her own mind. âI was desperate by then. I couldn't cope on my own, and Melanie was having to do too much, and the insurance money was all gone and I didn't know which way to turn. Ian was my only chance. And I sort of convinced myself that Graham really was dead, that I'd been mistaken at the morgue that day. After all, I'd been upset. I was on tranquillizers for ages afterwards. So obviously I must have imagined the whole thing. That's how I fixed it in my mind. All his things were in the pockets, so it must have been him and he really was dead. So I married Ian and â that was that.'
âExcept,' Slider said, and now he really was punting, âGraham didn't stay dead, did he?'
She looked wary. âWhy d'you say that?'
âOh, come on, you've told me the worst, no point in holding back now. Did he contact you?'
âNo,' she said definitely. âNever. I was always scared he would, but I suppose he had as much to lose as me. He'd have gone to jail. No, he never contacted me.'
âMelanie, then? He contacted Melanie.' She didn't want to answer, and he added, âAbout two years ago.'
She shuddered and looked down. âI don't know. She never said anything to me, but I guessed something was up. It was just after she and Scott got together. I was so glad she'd got a nice boy at last, one who wanted to marry her and everything. And she was so happy at first. Then they moved into that flat together, and soon afterwards she started acting strangely. She wasn't happy any more â not the way she used to be. I think she tried to tell me a couple of times, but she never managed it. Then one day, when we were washing up after Sunday lunch, she asked me about her dad dying, asked me about identifying him at the morgue, and I just knew she knew. And how could she, unless she'd seen him, unless he'd told her?'
âWhat did you say to her when she asked that?'
âI just told the lie again. What could I say? I couldn't tell her he'd been alive all that time and I'd let her grieve for him for nothing, could I? That I'd committed bigamy? Not to say insurance fraud. She'd have hated me. So I let her think I didn't know, that I really thought he was dead, and after that she got sort of â strained with me. I suppose it was always on her mind, wanting to tell me but not daring to.'
âFor all the same reasons.'
âYes.' She brooded a moment. âHe should never have done it. But he loved her so much, I suppose he couldn't keep away.
Me
he could leave and never see again, but his little Mel . . . And he was always a selfish man. He wouldn't leave her alone for her own good. It would be
his
wants he'd be thinking about.'
âBut you never actually knew anything about his whereabouts? Or that he had definitely contacted Melanie? It was just surmise on your part.'
âI didn't know anything. But I
knew
, if you understand me.' She looked up at him sharply. âHow did
you
know?'
âI guessed. A couple of things. The ring, for instance. And the fact that she bought a takeaway meal for someone that night â it had to be someone close to her.'
She was struck by that. âGod, was he making her buy him food? I suppose he was broke again. What was it, Chinese? He loved Chinese. I can't stand the stuff.'
âAnd then there was the fact that Melanie had a call from someone that evening, someone she called “Dad”. But you'd said she never called Ian “Dad”.'
âNo. She never did. Not once that I remember, ever.'
They had come to the place of dread.
âAnd then you said to my colleague, “A father wouldn't hurt his own daughter, would he?” She thought you meant Ian, but when I read it in her report, I wondered.'
âYou don't think,' she began, and it was a plea rather than a question, âthat he had anything to do with it, do you?'
âI don't know. I have to find out. But to find out, I had to know the whole story.'
âBut why would you even think â I mean, apart from Melanie, nobody knows where he is, even what name he's living by.'
âI think I do,' Slider said. âI think he's the man who found her body.'
All the implications seemed to fall on her at once like a rock slide. She gave a terrible cry â not loud, but agonizing â the like of which Slider would be glad never to hear again.
âDid you ever hear her mention a man called William McGuire?'
âNo,' she said. âNever. Is that him?'
âI don't know. It's possible.'
She twisted her hands together and rocked in her agony. âIf he killed her, it's my fault, for not telling her, for lying to her all these years. If she could have told me he'd contacted her, I could have protected her.'
âI don't knowâ' Slider began, but she was beyond reaching.
âI've killed my own daughter,' she said. And she rocked, silent and dry-eyed, in a place of unimaginable nightmare.
It took some nifty telephoning and hard talking back at the office to get in touch with the head of the Parks Department, who was extremely miffed about having to go in on a Sunday to access the employment records of one of his very minor minions. Slider was preparing to go and meet the man himself, there being no one in the Sunday-slim department to send, when Atherton walked in.
âWhy aren't you at home?' Slider asked him.
âWhy aren't you?' he countered.
âI've been following up something that occurred to meâ'
âIn the stilly watches of the night,' Atherton finished for him. âWhereas I have been reclining on the sofa all morning with two cats sitting on me, watching
Chitty Chitty Bang Bang
until I'm ready to kill myself.'
âWhy watch it, then?'
âI wasn't watching it â I said the cats were. It's one of their favourite films. Vash's got a
thing
for James Robertson Justice. Emily's not back until Tuesday and my mind is racketing itself to pieces, so I thought I'd come in. And here you are. What's the panic?'
âI'll tell you in the car,' Slider said. âYou can come with me. I'll need you there for the last bit, anyway.'
âSo,' said Atherton, some time later, as they trundled towards Uxbridge, âyou were going entirely on her calling someone “Dad” over the phone? You didn't think it could have been a misspeak?'
âAnything could be anything. But remember, less than a week before, he had slapped her face. I don't think the word “Dad” would have leapt to her lips for Ian Wiseman at that point. But there was also the takeaway. Who do you buy food for? It's either charity, or love. No one's come forward to say she brought them a lifeline of Chinese food that evening. I'd have bet on Hibbertâ'
âBut he's out of it.'
âSo who else did she love? And there was another problem. If she bought Chinese for someone, and then got into their car and drove off with them, there must have been a reason. It wasn't exactly closing time, butâ'
Atherton got it. âHe was drunk? Turned up drunk in his car to collect the grub, and she thought, oh bugger, I'll have to drive him home?'
âHe was a drinker in his previous incarnation. And there was the matter of her savings going missing over the past two years, and the two hundred on the Friday. Who was she giving that to?'
Atherton thought he'd spotted a flaw. âIf she drove him home, how was she going to get home herself?'
âMy guess is that she'd drive herself home in his car, and then either he'd come and collect it the next day, or she'd take it back to him and come home by bus or taxi. It would be a Saturday, remember, so no work. And Hibbert was away, so there'd be no complications from that direction. And if she was worried about Fitton seeing her drive in in a strange car, she could have always parked it round the corner. But as it happened, the need didn't arise.'
A silence fell between them on that thought, which lasted all the way to the council offices, where a very annoyed Trevor Parrott was waiting to give them his full and generous co-operation on this matter of importance.
âI can't see why it couldn't have waited until tomorrow,' he grumbled. âThen you needn't have bothered me. One of the girls could have given you the information you wanted.'
âOperational reasons, I'm afraid,' Slider said smoothly. âI can't tell you more.'
âWell, if this man is a dangerous criminal, you ought to arrest him, not leave him running around loose to endanger other people. And you should have warned us about him so we could dismiss him. What did he do, anyway?'
âHe's a gardener, I believe,' Slider said.
Parrot mottled. âYou deliberately misunderstood me. I meant what
crime
has he committed, of course.'
âI don't know yet that he has done anything.'
âThen why on earth did you have to drag me out on a Sunday?' Parrot cried in frustration, back at the front of the loop.
âWe won't keep you long,' Atherton said soothingly, seeing that all the soothe seemed to have leaked out of his boss for the moment. âIt's good of you to help us out. We wouldn't ask if it wasn't important.'
It didn't take long. William McGuire had joined the department two years ago as an under-gardener, after a short spell on benefits. Before that he had been self-employed, a minicab driver, for eight years, first for Remo's Taxis, Fulham, then Magic Cabs of Shepherd's Bush. Previous address in Fulham. And there was a note that, in view of the location of his work for the council, he had been offered a council-owned one-bedroom maisonette in Lakeside Close. No black marks against him since he took up employment. His wage, Slider observed, was minuscule, which accounted, he supposed, for his being taken on with no previous parks and gardens experience. Probably no one else had wanted the job. It was hardly worth coming off benefits for. And he had been absent from work for the past week without notice.
âSo that closes the last gap,' Slider said as they walked back to the car. âThe less fussy minicab firms â and I know Magic Cabs â will take on anyone with a clean driving licence, no questions asked. And a short spell on benefits gave him an insurance number to take to an actual employer. All we don't know is why he changed from being a driver to being a gardener.'
âIf you think that's all we don't know, you must be on something,' Atherton observed. âWhether he came back into Melanie's life; why he did; whether he killed her, if he did; why he “found” the body â not to mention that we don't actually
know
he's Graham Hunter at all. That's just a guess on your part. You'll look a right wally when it turns out he isn't.'
âThank you for that comforting thought. But McGuire's record only goes back ten years, to the time of the Greenford crash. Before that he was a hospital porter living in a council flat in Paddington. Why the sudden break?'
âHe might well have wanted a complete change after the trauma of the crash. Why not?'
âAnd there's the fact that he and Hunter were both in the crash, and he's the one who found Hunter's murdered daughter ten years on. That's one hell of a coincidence.'
âAh, well,' Atherton admitted lightly, âthere you have me. I'll go for a coinkidink every time over hard fact. Makes life so much more interesting.'
âYou're supposed to be polite to me and flatter me. You seem to forget I'm your boss,' Slider said, plipping open the car and climbing in. âI should hate to see you throwing everything away when the world is at your feet.'
âUsual place for it,' Atherton observed, getting in the other side. âWhere are we going now?' he asked, as Slider started the engine.
âWhere d'you think?' said Slider.
âOh boy,' said Atherton. âI feel a lawsuit coming on.'
âThere's something else,' Slider admitted after a silence, âand it's my fault.'
âWhat?'
âWhen Norma brought me the forensic report on the clothes, I was busy. I told her to precis for me. I didn't read it until last night.'
âAnd?'
âThe dog hair on her clothes wasn't black, it was white. And Marty doesn't have a white hair on him.'
Atherton wrinkled his nose. âMcGuire had a white dog,' he admitted, âbut it was the dog that found her. The hair could have got on her clothes then.'
âShe was found lying on her back. The hair was on the seat of her skirt. So unless the dog managed to turn her right over and sit on herâ'