For Laurie
.
I grab Tamsin's arm and drag her along the corridor to the room I need to start thinking of as my new condensation-free office, muttering, âThanks for your contribution.' I slam the door, lock it and put the chain across. If Laurie comes back and wants to get in, tough. He told me I could be him from Monday; all I'm doing is moving the new arrangement forward by two working days. Let him come back and catch me.
Let him come back.
âYou're welcome.' Tamsin plonks herself down in Laurie's chair and puts her feet up on his model globe. Her face clouds over. âYou're being sarcastic, aren't you?'
âI could have done without the too-poor-for-mineral-water quip. I have to work here, Tam.'
âI thought you were handing in your notice first thing this morning.'
âI changed my mind.'
âHow come?'
There's no reason not to tell her, though I'm not sure it'll make sense to anyone but me. âI rang my mum this morning. I told her I was worried about being paid more than I'm realistically worth, Maya and Raffi resenting me, stuff like that.'
âShe told you not to be an idiot?' Tamsin guesses.
âNot quite. She suggested I say to them that I wouldn't feel comfortable earning so much, and perhaps we could agree a salary that was somewhere between what I'm on now and what Laurie was on, something we could all feel happy with. I listened to her and I swear I could hear myself saying it, sounding ever so reasonable and timid â sounding like
her
, mousey and modest and unassuming and . . .' I shrug. âLaurie was right. No one asks for less money. I don't care what Maya and Raffi think of me, but . . . I'd lose all respect for myself if I didn't try to make this work.' I feel obliged to add, âEven though, secretly, I don't think I'm worth anywhere near a hundred and forty a year.'
âYou're suffering from Reverse L'Oréal Syndrome,' says Tamsin. â“Because I'm not worth it”. So, you're going to make the film?'
âYou don't think I can do it, do you?'
âIf it can be done, you can do it,' she says matter-of-factly. âWhy wouldn't you be able to?'
I consider telling her what makes me different from her or Laurie or anyone else at Binary Star, why I can't hear the names Yardley, Jaggard and Hines without feeling a cold dragging in the pit of my stomach.
I didn't tell my mother about Laurie's film. I mentioned the promotion and the pay-rise, but not what I'd be working on. Not that she'd have tried to stop me. Mum would be more likely to dance naked in the street than say anything that might lead to an argument.
Tamsin's the only person at work I've ever been tempted to tell. Trouble is, she's never silent for long enough. This time's no different. âThe question is, do you still have a film to make after Ray Hines left you stranded on the pavement? Have you spoken to Paul Yardley? Talked Sarah Jaggard back on board?'
âI haven't done anything yet.'
âApart from spreading the contents of five box files randomly across the room,' says Tamsin dubiously, eyeing the papers on the floor and on every available surface.
âI was looking for something and I didn't find it. Does the name Wendy Whitehead ring any bells?'
âNo.'
âWhat are the chances of it being buried somewhere in all this lot? I've skim-read as much as I've had time to, butâ'
âDon't bother,' says Tamsin. âAny name that crops up even once, I'd know it. I know every expert witness, every health visitor, every solicitor . . .'
âWhat about just Wendy, then? She might have got married and changed her surname. Or divorced.'
Tamsin considers it. âNo,' she says eventually. âNo Wendys. Why?'
âShe rang me last night.'
âWendy Whitehead?'
âRachel Hines.'
She rolls her eyes. âI know. I was there, remember?'
âNo, I mean later. After she'd driven away without getting out of the car. Almost immediately after. She apologised, said she still wanted to talk to me, but I'd have to come to her.'
âDid she say why she drove off?'
âNo. I saw her looking behind me, sort of like . . . I don't know, it looked as if she was staring at somebody over my shoulder, but when I turned round there was no one there. I turned back and she'd driven away.'
âYou think she saw something that scared her off?'
âWhat could she have seen? I'm telling you, there was nothing there. Just me. No one walking past, no neighbours looking out of their windows.'
Tamsin frowns. âSo who's Wendy Whitehead?'
I hesitate. âThis might be something you'd rather not know.'
âIs it bad?'
I don't know how to answer that without telling her.
âIs Joe shagging her behind my back?' Tamsin kicks the globe over. âThat'd be typical of my luck at the moment.'
I can't help smiling. Joe would never be unfaithful to Tamsin. His favourite hobby is making no effort whatsoever. You can almost see him looking at other women and thinking
Don't need to bother, already got one of those
. âIt's got nothing to do with your personal life,' I say. I can't stand the suspense, even though I'm the one with the information, not the one waiting to be told. âRachel Hines said Wendy Whitehead killed her daughter and son.'
Tamsin snorts and slumps back in Laurie's chair.
My chair
. âNo one was in the house when Marcella Hines died apart from her and Ray. Same with Nathaniel four years later â he was alone with his mother at home when he died. Wendy Whitehead certainly wasn't there, if she even exists. What's more interesting is why Ray Hines is lying, and why now.' I open my mouth but I'm not quick enough. âI know why,' Tamsin says. âTo reel you in.'
âSo what do I do? Go and see her? Ring the police?' I spent most of last night asking myself these questions, unable to sleep for more than half an hour at a time.
âGo and see her for sure,' says Tamsin. âI'm curious. I've always been curious about her â she's a strange woman. She's gone to great lengths to keep Laurie at a distance, but she can't seem to get enough of you.'
If there's even the tiniest chance that it's true, then I ought to tell the police. And if Wendy Whitehead turns out to be a real person, one who didn't murder Marcella and Nathaniel Hines? She might be interrogated or even arrested, and I'd have caused trouble for an innocent woman. I can't do that, not without finding out more.
Not without being sure it isn't exactly what Rachel Hines wants me to do
.
Why hasn't Laurie rung me back? I've left messages for him everywhere I can think of, saying I need urgent advice.
Marcella and Nathaniel. Now I know their names. I haven't thought much about having children, but if I did, I wouldn't give them names like that. They're the sort of names you choose if you think you're someone to be reckoned with. I wonder if this is my Reverse L'Oréal Syndrome kicking in again; what would I call my kids, Wayne and Tracey?
Because I'm not worth it
.
Wayne Jupiter Benson Nattrass.
Oh, for God's sake, Felicity, grow up!
Why has Rachel Hines waited until now to mention Wendy Whitehead? Why would she go to prison rather than tell the truth?
âTell me about her,' I say to Tamsin. âEverything you know.'
âRay? She drew the short straw when it came to husbands, that's for sure. Have you read the transcripts of Laurie's interviews with Angus Hines?'
âNot yet.'
âThey're somewhere in all that lot.' Tamsin nods at the mess of papers. âDig them out, they're worth a read. You'll think Angus can't possibly have said those things until you come across the press cuttings in which he's quoted as saying the exact same things.' She shakes her head. âHave you ever had that, where you hear something from a person's own mouth, something they'd have no reason to lie about, and you still can't believe it?'
âWhat does he do? What's his job?'
âHe's some kind of editor at
London on Sunday
. He ditched Ray as soon as the verdict went against her. Paul Yardley and Glen Jaggard couldn't have been more different. They were with their wives all the way, totally supportive. I reckon that's why Ray Hines is such an oddster. If you think about it, she suffered an extra trauma. Helen and Sarah were let down by the system, but not by the people closest to them. Their families never doubted their innocence. When you get a chance to read all the notes, you'll see that Helen and Sarah consistently refer to their husbands as their rocks, both of them. Never mind a rock, Angus Hines isn't even a pebble!'
âWhat about the drugs?' I ask.
Tamsin looks puzzled. âSorry, was I supposed to bring some?'
âRachel Hines is a drug addict, right?'
She rolls her eyes. âWho told you that?'
âI heard two women talking about her on the Tube once. She mentions it herself somewhere too . . .' I look around for the relevant bit of paper, but can't remember which corner of the office I dropped it in, or even what it was.
âHer interview with Laurie,' says Tamsin. âRead it again â assuming you can find it among the debris of my onceimmaculate filing system. She was being sarcastic, taking the piss out of the public's ridiculous perception of her. She's no more a . . .'
The door opens and Maya comes in carrying two mugs of something hot on a tray. âPeace offering,' she says brightly. âGreen tea. Fliss, I need to speak to you as soon as poss, hon, so don't be too long. Tam, please say we're still friends. We can still have jolly nights out together, can't we?'
Tamsin and I take our cups, too stunned to speak.
âOh, and I picked this up from reception by mistake, hon.' Maya pulls an envelope out of the waistband of her jeans and hands it to me. She flashes a sickly smile at us, waves the tray in the air and leaves.
A cream-coloured envelope. I recognise the handwriting; I've seen it on two other envelopes.
âGreen tea?' Tamsin snaps. âSlime is green. Snot is green. Tea's got no business beingâ'
âTell me about Ray Hines not being a drug addict,' I say, tossing the envelope to one side. I know there will be numbers in it, and that I won't be able to work out what they mean, so I might as well forget them. It's someone's idea of a joke, and eventually they'll deliver their punchline. It's probably Raffi. He's the comedian around here. One of his favourite topics of conversation is funny things he said and how much everyone laughed at them. âIf she isn't or wasn't a druggie, why did anyone think she was?' I ask, trying to sound as if my mind's still on Rachel Hines.
Tamsin stands up. âI've got to get out of here. You've been summoned, and if I stay, I'll end up killing somebody.'
âBut . . .'
âLaurie wrote an article called “The Doctor Who Lied”âit's somewhere in all this mess. Everything you need to know about Ray Hines is in it.'
âWhat paper was it in?'
âIt hasn't been published yet. The
British Journalism Review
are taking it, and the
Sunday Times
are publishing an abridged version, but both have to wait until Judith Duffy loses her GMC hearing.'
âWhat if she wins?'
Tamsin looks at me as if I've made the most idiotic suggestion she's ever heard. âRead the article and you'll see why that's not going to happen.' She leaves the office with a parody of Maya's wave and a âBye,
hon'
.
I manage to restrain myself from begging her not to leave me. Once she's gone, I try and fail to persuade myself to put the cream envelope in the bin without opening it, but I'm too nosey â nosier than I am frightened.
Don't be ridiculous. It's some stupid numbers on a card â only an idiot would be scared of that.
I tear open the envelope and see the top of what looks like a photograph. I pull it out, and feel a knot start to form in my stomach. It's a photo of a card with sixteen numbers on it, laid out in four rows of four. Someone's held the card close to the lens in order for the picture to be taken; there are fingers gripping it on both sides. They could be a man's or a woman's; I can't tell.
I look for a name or any writing, but there's nothing.
I stuff the photograph back into the envelope and put it in my bag. I'd like to throw it away, but if I do that I won't be able to compare the fingers holding the card to Raffi's fingers, or anyone else's.
Don't let it wind you up. Whoever's doing it, that's exactly what they want.